Hi Don
All help is very welcome.
It should be a overview over all the techniques used
for electromechanical modeling.
If you know something about equivalent circuit diagrams
the please write a section about it.
Don Kelly wrote:
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"Knud Soerensen" <4tuu4k002@sneakemail.com> wrote in message
news:4798ca77$0$89174$157c6196@dreader1.cybercity.dk...
Hi
I have made a wiki about Electromechanical modeling
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromechanical_modeling
Please, help by adding some more info.
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Just what do you want> -so far it appears to be a proposal with some
topics
listed.
There are several levels of modelling
- the mathematical description and differential equations of the
electrical
and the mechanical systems as typically done for rotating machines
-expressing systems in the form of an equivalent circuit diagram as is
often done for transducers such as speakers. In the latter there are two
approaches- current<>force, voltage<>velocity (nodal based) or
voltage<>force, current<>velocity (loop equivalents). Personally I prefer
the nodal approach as the actual relationships that occur at the boundary
between the electrical and mechanical systems is current<>force,
voltage<>velocity.