I've built a simple robot that can move. I'm using brushless motors. I've realized that at slow speeds the motors pull a lot of current. I didn't understand the power / current / efficiency charts when I started. I see it in the charts, now, that the efficiency in electric motors is at high RPM and the low speed torque is awesome but comes at a price of high current.
For mobile robots, do people generally just provide high-current batteries for slow speeds, ignore slow speeds, or do they build robots with variable transmissions instead of fixed gearboxes? When I look around I just see designs with fixed gearboxes but I feel like I'm missing something.
If I look beyond hobby type projects I see talk about CVT and the Inception drive but I'm wondering anyone at the home / hobbiest level do anything like that.
Plum Geek Ringo Robot. Brushed motors, no transmission at all!
Parallax BOT Bot. Brushed motors, no variable transmission.
iRobot Roomba/Create. Brushed motors, no variable transmission.
FLIR Packbot. Brushless motors, no variable transmission.
DARPA LAGR Program Robot. Electric wheelchair motors, no variable transmission.
Stanley. Desiel engine with variable transmission.
Tesla Model 3, brushless electric motor with variable transmission.
That is helpful too. I had been only thinking about the top end for the gear ratio but I see now that I need to rethink that!
Thanks again.
– mrtidy May 24 '20 at 16:28