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PID integral term

 
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Zek_De



Joined: 13 Aug 2016
Posts: 100

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PID integral term
PostPosted: Fri Feb 10, 2017 10:58 am     Reply with quote

Hello friends,
I couldn't understand how to do integral term limits. These are my codes, and 20.000 max pwm to max power. Where is my mistake?
Code:

int16_t Constrain(float test, int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
   if(test < a) return a;
   else if(test > b) return b;
   else return (int16_t)lroundf(test);
}
//##########################################
uint16_t PIDX(uint16_t value, float target, float current)
{
   error = (target - current);
   integral = (float)Constrain((integral + error*deltaT), -19000, 19000);
   derivative = (error - previousError) / deltaT;
   previousError = error;
   return (Constrain(value + Kp*error + Ki*integral + Kd*derivative, 0, 19999));
}
temtronic



Joined: 01 Jul 2010
Posts: 9247
Location: Greensville,Ontario

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:18 am     Reply with quote

to my old eyes, it's using floating point numbers...
or...it could be lack of casting or other math related confusion,like braces.

When doing math like this, you should print out(display) ALL of the interim terms and use KNOWN input values, compare what the PIC says vs what YOU have done the math on.

I didn't use them 20 years ago with 16F877s and realtime helicopters...
..no need for them and they take a HUGE amount of time to compute.

Jay
Ttelmah



Joined: 11 Mar 2010
Posts: 19553

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:52 am     Reply with quote

Yes. The idea of 'PID', and 'floating point', don't really go together on a PIC, unless you are controlling something really slow. I've successfully done some quite fast PID's using 24bit integers, with the last byte treated as the fractional part. 1.0000, then is stored as 256....
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