Here are two simple 12V DC motor speed controllers that can be built for
just a few dollars. They exploit the fact that the rotational speed of a
DC motor is directly proportional to the mean value of its supply
voltage. The first circuit shows how variable voltage speed control can
be obtained via a potentiometer (VR1) and compound emitter follower (Q1
& Q2). With this arrangement, the motor’s DC voltage can be varied
from 0V to about 12V. This type of circuit gives good speed control and
self-regulation at medium to high speeds but very poor low-speed control
and slow starts. The second circuit uses a switchmode technique to vary
motor speed.
Fig.1: a very simple motor speed controller based on a compound emitter follower (Q1 & Q2).
Here
a quad NOR gate (IC1) acts as a 50Hz astable multivibrator that
generates a rectangular output. The mark-space ratio of the rectangular
waveform is fully variable from 20:1 to 1:20 via potentiometer VR1. The
output from the multivibrator drives the base of Q1, which in turn
drives Q2 and the motor. The motor’s mean supply voltage (integrated
over a 50Hz period) is thus fully variable with VR1 but is applied in
the form of high-energy "pulses" with peak values of about 12V.
Fig.2: this slightly more complicated circuit gives better low speed control and higher torque.
This type of circuit gives excellent full-range speed control and gives high motor torque, even at very low speeds. Its degree of speed self-regulation is proportional to the mean value of the applied voltage. Note that for most applications, the power transistor (Q2) in both circuits will need to be mounted on an appropriate heatsink.
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