SP.711: Wednesday 10/15, Day 4 Today is a day to finish up the wiring and testing of the motor driver chip, and if you've already finished that, work on a non-essential but useful topic: current sensing. 1) Catch up on remaining projects from the past two classes. then you can do (A) and (B) below in either order. (A) is more precise current sensing using the LMD18200 chip, but has some tricky details to work out, and (B) is quick-and-dirty current sensing with a series resistor (but can be simpler and cheaper). A.1) Use the LMD18200's "Current Sense Pin" (see the datasheet) to constantly read the current flowing through it and print the result out to the serial port. Try this at full speed first, then try it at lower speeds. Look through the LMD18200 datasheet and the extra "Application Note" we have to see some of the tricky details of sensing current while doing PWM. A.2) Set up the PIC to automatically shut off the motor (and flash a warning LED?) if the current gets too high. The idea of this is that you should be able to drive the linear stage into the end walls and have the motor automatically shut off without breaking anything or burning anything out. A.3) You may have had some problems doing A.2. You may need to filter the current (with an analog circuit or in your program on the PIC) to keep the PIC from automatically shutting down the motor just based on chort current spikes or the larger current spike when you change directions. B) Implement super-cheap current sensing by placing a 0.2 ohm, high wattage resistor in series with the motor (think about where you want to put it... there are several possible places in the circuit and it makes a difference). You want to read the voltage across the resistor and convert that into a current. This method could be used with your simple transistor driver from last Thursday for a super-cheap motor-driving system.