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You can make your machine work better.
Published by Elsevier May 2012. Control System Design Guide (4th Edition) will help engineers to apply control theory to practical systems using their PC. This book provides an intuitive approach to controls, avoiding unnecessary mathematics and emphasizing key concepts with dozens of control system models. Whether you are just starting to use controllers or have years of experience, this book will help you improve the performance of your machines and processes.
Control Systems Design Guide is available at many bookstores including www.elsevier.com and Amazon.com. What’s New in the 4th Edition? The fourth
edition of Control System Design Guide adds material on rapid
control prototyping (RCP), a technique that allows designers to run their
control law models on physical hardware.
Chapter 13 has been expanded to introduce the topic; Chapter 19 was
added to provide numerous examples. In addition, each chapter has been
reviewed and updated. Visual ModelQ, the
companion software to this text, has also been updated including revisions
for all the models. From the Reviews: “Most texts on industrial
control are long on theory and short on practice. This book is a rare gem
that presents the theory— without overloading you on details—and then
explains how to actually use the theory in practice.” “…the new addition in this edition, rapid
control prototyping for a motion system, [is] both timely and useful in
smoothing the transition from simulation to an embedded, hardware solution.” "This book presents highly complex topics, but avoids relying on
detailed mathematical analysis, and instead emphasizes practical approaches
that can be applied by anyone working on drive and motion systems. I highly
recommend Control System Design Guide as an extremely practical and thorough
servo system controls reference." "Control System Design Guide should be on every practicing servo
control engineer's shelf. It provides a comprehensive overview of design
methods and guidelines that typically take years of practice to learn. I wish
that there had been a copy to read when I started my career in servo control.
If you are working in this field, I strongly recommend that you read this
book." "No matter how much you think you may know about the subject, there
is something everyone can learn from this book. This book is control systems
A-Z, and is the best book I have seen on the subject." Download Visual ModelQ, the companion to Control System Design Guide (4th Ed.) The basics of control systems were developed in the first half of the 20th
century. Our predecessors aimed a cannon or warmed a
bath using many of the same concepts we do. Of course, time and technology
have generated many refinements. Digital processors have changed the way we
implement a control law, but, in many cases they haven't changed the law
itself. PID control works about the same today as it did four or five decades
ago. Over the past several years, I've had the opportunity to spend a day with about 1500 engineers through the seminar "How to Improve Servo Systems." These are motivated people, willing to donate a day to listen to someone who might provide insight for the problems they face. Most are degreed engineers who work in industry and roughly half have taken at least one controls course. A few minutes into the seminar, I usually ask, "how many of you regularly apply principles of controls you learned at school." Normally, fewer than one in ten raises a hand. It's clear there is a gap between what is taught and what is used. So, why the gap? It might be because controls is so often taught with an undue emphasis on mathematics. Intuition is abandoned as students learn how to calculate and plot one effect after another, often only vaguely understanding the significance of the exercise. I was one of those students years ago. I enjoyed controls and did well in my controls classes, but I graduated unable to design or even tune a simple PI control system. It doesn't have to be that way. You can develop a feel for controls! This book endeavors to help its readers do just that. Principles are presented accompanied by practical methods of analysis. Dozens of models are used to help readers practice the material, for practice is the most reliable way to gain fluency. The goal of each chapter is to foster intuition. Control Systems Design Guide is
available at many bookstores including www.elsevier.com
and Amazon.com. Write us at qxdesign@msn.com. We value your feedback! |