A real control system - how to start designing
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- Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024
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Let’s design a control system the way you might approach it in a real situation rather than an academic one. In this video, I step through a control problem and show how control theory is intimately tied to all aspects of engineering. Plus there's real hardware too!
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Email - controlsystemlectures@gmail.com
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Amazing, this is what we should learn in unis
Your channel is amazing too 😍
Too bad we don't. Almost getting master's degree in control engineering and all we have done practically are 3 lab exercises with total lab time of 10h. put into perspective, it's 2 days worth of theory classes (3% of the whole semester)...
Agree. Control classes almost always start with the assumption that your plant model is linear, time-invariant and known. And even more so with advanced classes. A lot of professors seem to get side-tracked with all of the elegant mathematics and neglect many of the practical aspects of control system design.
mr walid your channel helps me a lot thank you so much
@@qdav5 Exactly this! But this isnt the real world, only some abstracts to get you started - The same thing was trigonometry in school, completely abstract and seemingly impractical. Putting it into practice, and it starts making sense.
Please do more of practical things. The stuff at the beginning is exactly how I felt out of the Uni.
As an EE master student focus in control, this video is literally god sent. It makes me have more confidents in myself, not only because i understood everything you say but also because my knowledges from Uni CAN be applied to solve real world problems. Thank you very much.
Brian, thanks for another great video and for highlighting the Temperature Control Lab. It is great to see how control system theory works with real data. You've done a great job fitting an overview of controller development into one video.
Great work to you as well
Great video, Brian! I used to watch your videos while I was a Bachelor's student, and I still watch them now as a PhD student (in Control Engineering)!
After all the control classes I've attended to....your videos still amaze me. What a great way to teach!
This is leaps and bounds better than any paid course I've ever seen!
Thanks. I studied Automatic control at University, but pure of theory and math. Your video opens my eyes :)
This is pure gold
Best to get understand about control system.👍
Trying to design a control system for a model greenhouse...heater, vents, fan...not a mechanical engineer, rather an electronics tech...so a video like this is great to understand the issues involved, and the underlying principles and fundamentals. Thanks
I have so many tabs with your videos that I feel I will never end them. Thank you!
Probably the best video about Control theory in the whole internet. Amazing work, one day I will give it back too. Thank you!
I do agree with Walid Issa, schools have to spend more time on practical approaches to control design rather than spending the whole time on the theory. Your video was amazing. Please, keep it up.
To me this videos are AMAZING, I am an Electronic Engineer and I have no doubt this has been the best video related to control systems
Thank you so much, Brian! As a senior getting ready to graduate (and struggling in my controls class), I really appreciated the way you bridged academic knowledge and real world experience.
This type of content needed to go further a sort of a playlist. I could watch all day.
This video is pure gold, I spent 2 years getting my masters degree in non linear control and never had seen such a clear and well explained implementation example.
This should be the first class in any Control Engineering course at universities. Really good!
Amazing video! Literally shortcuts years of learning that a student usually would need to actually understand how to apply controls principals in a real life scenario. I wish this is how they taught controls in universities!
All your videos are great, but I think this is special because after two semesters of control theory I could not answer the question of what exactly I am learning? Some equations? Math? You give me the answer to this question and give a sense to me and motivation! Big thanks!
thank you so much for showing me that designing a product doesn't necessarily have to be a trial and error process and that parameters can be simulated in such a manner. i had no idea!
This is the best content I have ever seen in youtube for the control theory's sample applications. Keep forward with practical applications sir. Thank you.
I'm at school and don't have enough time to watch the video, but I'm happy that you're back to posting great educational content.
Thank You for this video, i'm a control engineering student and this i what i need, a practical example of what i study at university
I'm at my freshman year as a control and automation engineer and this video was so helpful to foresee what I will do in the real world with all those theorems. Please keep making like this kind of videos. Thank you so much!
I liked it. The beginning aspect of the video explaining the setup was fantastic.
Your video has been incredibly helpful for engineering students in understanding control theory and its real-life applications. Applying control theory to real-world scenarios is a key focus of my research. Your video has inspired me and provided valuable guidance for this goal.
This is what I want to learn. It's very hard to tie the theory with practice when all you are fed is the mathematics and simulation at best. To see the implementation on an actual hardware and you reasoning through the problems made the theory much more clear. Thank you so much! Your videos have helped me a ton.
First of all, WOW, this is such an incrediblle video! You have such an incredible talent for teaching!
Second of all, I am on my senior year for a BS in ME. I have been putting SO much time and effort into trying to understand all of the subtle, complex, and outrageous concepts involved in my clasess up to this point.
However, there has always been the ever looping thought to myself, why put in SO much effort? What is the point of truely understnad every distinct concept of Thermo, heat transfer, programing, dynamics, physics, circuits...the list goes on... What if this is all a waste of time, and I will never need to know these subtlties in my future, real world engineering profession.
But this video does a fantastic job of detailing that proves to myself that everything can tie back together if I know how to connect the pieces when it comes to reality situations. From what I've learned in my classes is that everything comes back, don't cheat yourself cause it'll come back again.
Thank you for being the post-school engineer that takes the time to showing us students why everything can potentially matter. You showed me my hard earned effort can and will make me the best engineer I can be.
I am currently struggling in tunning PID for my drone. Now I feel I know how to approach like an engineer. Kudos for this video.
I have started liking control engineering.
This is incredibly useful content to help contextualise control courses, thanks for taking the time to share it
Wow so fast and yet very understandable for someone with no background in control systems.
Best RUclipsr when it comes to educational content and presentation skills
Please do this type of videos, so that we can apply the control theory in real life. I am a great fan of your channel. After watching your videos all my doubts about control systems got cleared. Thank you.
Amazing video, you walked thru my college knowledge and brought me back where I am working now as onboard ETO, A lot completely I meet here starting from basic PID up to Calman filter.
The best engineers always have a strong mathematical knowledge, I can see it now after 11 years onboard.
As a young professional I am happy for every video (especially more practical ones) that you produce. Please do more!
really love you sir. Your videos is more usefull and time-saving than a bunch of classes in my university
Ever since I learned about PID controllers, I felt that something was missing -- for example, the delay. I think you explained very nicely how the "missing parts" are actually just part of the search for correct parameters! Great explanation!
Hey Brian, you're a legend.
I think you're doing the most for Control Students all over the world, your videos often address all the issues I have in my head, they answer questions that my lecturers often don't care about.
I loved the one on Laplace and this has quickly become my second favorite.
Words cannot express how much I think of you but thanks man!
GREAT video! It really helps to see a real-world application of this subject.
This has really helped to solidify my foundation. Thanks again!
Brian thank you so much for your generosity! I'm 58 years old and always loved tinkering as a kid but, my family situation growing up was not conducive to supporting my desires. I became a sales person, then a technical sales person and had to retire early do to my health. I thank you for being such a good teacher. Now I have some time in my hands, and hope...God Willing to be able to put it into building me some things from scratch. I hope and pray to build an EV, ATV...machine. I have ideas that I'd like to pursue and your videos are letting me know whether or not they are realistic. I feel great to an extent by what you said about just learning the background of the processes "the philosophy" of it is what comes to mind now, and that indeed we are working with existing components / systems...that have done all the math work already.
I would be lost without your in put and I do need to learn my electronics and math all over again. I know, I have a long way to go. Thanks to you I am becoming able to relate with the "WHY" aspect of things. My math teacher when I was in High School tried to explain the "Why?" purpose of the Algebra but I never recalled him succeeding with me in this area. Then again we didn't have MatLab, and such richness of electronics to workout these algorithms. The concepts and how you explain them give universal understanding for correct EV applications and anything to do with EV or Hybrid or anything one needs to automate using control systems. I have subscribed and will share it on facebook...with the hopes your coverage will increase and you get many more subscribers. God Bless and all the very Best!
Have you tried publishing some of your courses in Udemy (dot com) ?
it is a blessing to see all the concepts taught at school to put in action. it is even better to see while still in school :)
You are like Bob Ross. Just for control system design. I enjoy your wonderful explanations.
Nooo, why did this video end? I was ready to hear you talk on this topic for 20 more hours!
Great stuff... I'm currently doing an internship at a company and end up learning way more from your channel than on the job!
This was an incredible overview. Loved how you build it up starting with an open loop, adding the closed loop, and showed the graph giving a real sense of the value of characterizing the system, and showing how feed forward and model predictive control can be used too (many questions on these). Superb content. Thank you!
Really appreciate the video! I have my first interview to be a controls engineer coming in about an hour!
Anonymous Owl good luck!
How'd you go?
Great video . I really like the way you analysed a practical problem and then showed the use of tools and control theory you can use to design the controller .
Just beautiful, this is the way to make control theory understandable.
I hardly ever comment anywhere on RUclips, but just wanted to say THANK YOU! These types of videos are great and super super interesting. Would love to see more!
Brian, first of all thank you for making such an informative video; which I found is a perfect blend of theory and practical aspect for building control systems. I would suggest you to continue this series with implementing advanced controllers(like MPC, Optimal and robust controllers). It would be great of you to explain the orange box to beginners so they may get an overview of communication between computer and arduino board.
In the end, a big thumbs up for your work !
This is brilliant - it's this bridge over to applying the knowledge that schools and unis are missing. Thanks, and please keep the vids coming!
Hey Brian, I am one of your Patreons. I deeply agree with the other people who have commented on these videos. I have my masters in electrical engineering and I have learn about the theory repeatedly but the only thing I know to do in practice is tuning PID controllers. For the first time, I understand the significance of the step response and I can't thank you enough for that. Please please please post more videos of practical, even if there isn't hardware, just working within a simulator is great!
Some of the stuff I would love to see are state space equations in practice.
0:00 to 2:39 ... Best statement of experience stated in a concise manner. Ever.
Still, the best lecturer for control system design. Ever.
I wish I would have such theory and practi working along like this video while I was a Engineering Degree Student. Congratulations...Pretty explicative.👍
I found this video very helpful. It gives me a big picture overview of the entire process.
Thank you very much for this. This really made me understand what it actually is apart from the theory in university
Also, really appreciate you setting the stage with the career questions you were trying to answer. That's very helpful.
OMG!
This is just amazing
I felt like, first time i am seeing someone explaining real engineering!
Thanks bro...
Man you are great. please come with more of such problems.
Fantastic, I myself have used this device for learning control theory in the context of chemical processes at the undergraduate level. It is refreshing to see the benefit of using this device from another perspective, and I learned a couple things I didn't know about the overall control system design process. Thanks for this excellent lecture!
OOO MY GOD!!!! This is it!!! This is what everyone at the Unis should teach us about. A theory is great, but without practical knowledge, every theory I learned seems like a waste when I have to design a control system in a real situation. Thank you so much :). I'll make my project myself after this. I never knew that you can use Matlab and python that way to figure out the mathematical function of a system. I learned something new today. Once again, thank you so much, Brian. Please do make more videos of this practical example. :D
This is brilliant. Would love to see more!
Thanks a lot for this video. We really lack such practical examples to play with. More of such system designing will be greatly appreciated.
This is the best video I found on internet today.
Thank you Brian. This really helped in getting an overview of all the critical steps involved.
Looking at things like overshoot in action is amazing
I really appreciate you going through this process and discussing how the practical aspects of control theory that I never got to experience at University!
Great video (even considering your super-high standards). You said it'd be a marathon... but the pacing was great, and you had me on the edge of my seat the whole time!
I'd love to see more videos in this series demonstrating different controller design techniques with actual hardware. Having a real system responding to the controller makes it so easy to visualize and contextualize everything.
Thanks for all your hard work.
I failed in securing a placement because of my control system skills. I thought the university classes are enough but I was woken to reality. Thanks so much for doing this! I am here to make sure I will succeed in the next one!
This is so cool. I feel more confident in my degree now. Followed a similar approach in a project
I'm so glad and fortunate for people like you, thanks! Hopefully one day when I am more knowledgeable I will also share my experiences as you have done for me. :)
I really love your videos, all of them, doesn't matter if it's theory or practical applications, they do help me to see the connections between paper and the real world.
When you talked about how it was for you right after you graduated from university with that mindset "there has to be an optimal solution", it really resonated with me.
Hope you're doing well man, your work has a good cause.
Greetings from Mexico!
HI
I have never seen a realistic video like this before. spatially with this amount of details. It was really great
This is phenomenal, thank you!
RUclips is awash in content created from limited understanding in the workings of whatever systems they are attempting to instruct on. This video serves as a first class example of the much needed filling that huge void; Knowledge in the field, examples, real world application, use of various tools, and information clarity.
Thank you for this. I highly anticipate your content.
This video is not long enough. I want to see what happens next :)
there is a part2
@@kevinshen9391 where is it?
@@mejnehmm i guess there isn't i just thought so because on the thumbnail it had a 1 in the lower-left corner like all of his series videos.
you mean launching satellite to space?
I’m on a PID project in the oilfield! Love this video Sir! God bless,
Charles
Well, unis never teach this way, you are a great teacher.
Wonderful demonstration of the practical steps required to solve a real-life control problem! Would absolutely love to see more! Hats off to you sir for inspiring us control engineers!
This is perfect. I would love to see more practical videos like this. Bridging the gap from control theory to real-world application is something that is hard to find and I personally learned a ton from this video. Your videos are great, man. Keep up the good work.
This was so helpful and informative! I'm working on Battery TMS for an EV application and I was super curious as to how a practical control system would be developed for this application as well as other real-life applications. This video definitely answered a lot of the questions I had!
One of the best videos on RUclips
Hi Brian, It's first time I am watching your video and I must admit, it give me quite a good understanding. I have much clarity now how to approach my control system problem and model it into the Simulink. Thank you !
Please do more! I just finished an introductory controls class and our final lab was pretty much exactly what you did here. Your videos were a huge help btw, but what are some more advanced control strategies outside of the standard PID, lead/lag/notch, feedforward, etc? I'm hooked on controls now and I'd love to see some videos of more advanced controllers and where they're used.
how about going into state space model? one of the methods I heard about is full state feedback
Oh wow! This is really amazing and inspiring stuff. I'm studying EE with a specialization in Automation and this is really inspiring to me. I passed control theory and now I'm taking digital control and I'm loving it! Please continue this series of desgining real stuff!!
This video is amazing. I'm a student of robotic engineering and I found this video really useful. I hope you'll make new videos about the real work behind a controller.
Is robotic engineering the same as mechatronics?
I love this style of video! It helps me understand my EE classes much more clearly
Great video, and a far better explanation than what could be given by my controls professor at University. Please keep making them and I look forward to when your book is complete.
This is how everyone should teach. Love it
Thanks, Brian. Great description of modeling the plant, in a practical sense.
Great video, it's always awesome to see control theory in real life
This is perfect for my Bachelor's thesis on designing a control system for automating measurements on AC units determining their cooling power. Thank you so much!
I really enjoyed watching this. I discovered your channel when I searched for some Nyquist plot explanations.
Great Video !!
I did something like this before but with self built system using power resistor (as heater), mosfet (as amplifier), tmp36 (temp sensor) and arduino as controller. I stopped until making PI controller without mathematical model. I was a successful one though. Now I'm working on figuring out whether there are better ammplifiers and how to generate the mathematical model. This video show another way to do it with matlab and phython (I did mine one with arduino IDE). Thanks for the knowledge !!
I appreciate the quality of your video especially the drawing, they are amazingly drawn
Brian, amazing explanation. I watched it without a blink. Please keep up contributing exactly this kind of beneficial content more!
I find your videos quite inspiring! I really liked this one, its nice to show, from time to time, how things are done "in real life" to add some spice to the theory.
I am really looking forward to seeing your book getting published! Great video, I would love to see more videos like that in the future! Keep up the good work!
Great video! I'm so glad you tied in all of the different aspects of the system like heat transfer, the controller, optimization, etc. This tied together many of the things I've learned in the past year at school.