Other tuning considerations, Other tuning considerations 40 – MTS Series 793 User Manual

Page 40

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MTS Series 793 Tuning and Calibration

About Tuning

Introduction

40

Other Tuning Considerations

Tuning with a dummy

specimen

Specimens can be very expensive. A dummy specimen is an inexpensive material
that has similar characteristics to the specimen selected for testing. The most
important specimen characteristic is its spring rate.

The advantage of a dummy specimen is that it can simulate how your testing
system reacts to real specimen. You can establish a more precise level of tuning
with a dummy specimen.

Tuning with a real

specimen

If you do not have a dummy specimen or if a dummy specimen is not practical,
review the following recommendations if you must use a real specimen:

Start your PIDF controls at minimum settings.

Do not use a square waveform for a massive specimen or a specimen prone
to vibrations.

Adjust rate to minimize any oscillation, overshoot, or ringing in the
waveform.

Be very conservative by beginning with a ramp waveform to establish initial
control. Then use a waveform that resembles the test waveform to provide a
precise level of control.

Tuning without any

specimen

A specimen is required to tune force and strain control modes. Initial force tuning
may be accomplished with the actuator up against the force sensor. The actuator
acts as a specimen reacting against the force sensor. Review the following
recommendations if you must tune without a specimen:

If you are using a load frame, adjust the load unit crosshead so the actuator
can reach the force sensor.

Carefully adjust the actuator using a tuned length control mode so it contacts
the force sensor.

Switch to force control before you proceed with initial tuning.

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