Monitoring the recharge cycle – Pioneer 2TM User Manual

Page 57

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disengage the motors while charging, such as by disconnecting, you will have to re-

engage them from the client or by manually pressing the MOTORS button on the
controller. Re-engaging the motors automatically retracts the charging mechanism.

While the motors are engaged, the charging mechanism cannot be deployed, except
by the CHARGE command. For best control and safety, consider also using the AROS
CHARGE command number 68 with integer argument 0 to gracefully cancel charging,

retract the charging mechanism, and restore motor state.

In addition to the client-mediated commands, you also may cancel recharging and

retract the charging mechanism manually with the Charge Deploy button, as described
in the earlier sections. Do note that client-mediated docking/charging behaviors may

act to reverse your actions.

For example, the client may, upon untimely loss of recharging power resulting from
someone pressing the Charge Deploy button, may re-engage the motors and have the

robot automatically attempt to re-dock with the charging platform and restart charging.

Your client software may disengage and re-engage the client-server connection without
disrupting recharging, as long as the robot remains positively engaged with the charging

platform and you don't do anything else to otherwise disrupt recharging. Once

disengaged from the client, the rules for engaging and disengaging the recharge
mechanism and power manually apply.

Monitoring the Recharge Cycle

Three digital signals indicate battery recharging states of the docking/recharging system.

All appear in the standard SIP.

Table 14. Recharging cycle states

Charge State

Overcharge

(ID7)

~Volts Charge

current

Bulk

1

discharge-~14V

6A

Overcharge

0

~14-14.7

6A

Float

1

~13.5

< 1A

The "power-good" signal appears as both User I/O DIGIN bit 6 and as bit 10 of the FLAGS

integer in the standard SIP, but their states are inversely related: DIGIN bit 6, normally

high (1) when not charging or when the charging system is not installed, goes low (0)

when the recharge system is engaged on the charge platform. Conversely, the power-
good bit 10 in FLAGS normally is low and goes high when the robot is docked and

charging. For compatibility with future docking systems, we recommend that your client
monitor the power-good FLAGS bit and not the DIGIN line to determine if the robot is

getting power from the charging platform.

The DIGIN and DIGOUT bytes of the Standard SIP also reflect the states of the associated
charging digital input and output bits. DIGOUT bits 4 and 5 are the inhibit and deploy
output ports described earlier. DIGIN bit 7, corresponding to the User I/O connector

digital input port ID7, pin 15, reflects the battery recharge cycle and, with the Battery
Voltage SIP value, helps the autonomous robot client determine immediate battery life

and operation times.

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