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TMotorCANControl

A Python API for controlling the AK-series Tmotor Actuators from CubeMars over the CAN bus. The project is geared towards the control of the AK80-9 actuator using a raspberry pi CAN hat or serial bus, but could eaisly be adapted for use with a different CAN/serial interface. The API files are in the src/TMotorCANControl folder in this repository. The main interface is in the file TMotorManager_mit_can.py for MIT mode, TMotorManager_servo_can.py for Servo mode (over CAN), and TMotorManager_servo_serial for Servo mode (over serial). Sample scripts can be found in the demos folder.

For video instructions on setting up the motor, see the CubeMars tutorials on Yoyo Liu's youtube channel. For written instructions on setting up the motor and configuring the pi, see these instructions on the Open Source Leg website.

API Usage

For some code examples, see the demos folder in this repository. For the full API documentation, see our page on ReadTheDocs. These examples make use of the soft_real_timeloop class from the NeuroLocoMiddleware library for the control loops, but the library could be used without this dependancy.

The TMotorManager_mit_can, TMotorManager_servo_can, and TMotorManager_servo_serial classes are in the TMotorManager module in the TMotorCANControl package. The intended use case would be to declare a TMotorManager_mit_can, TMotorManager_servo_can, or TMotorManager_servo_serial object in a block, and then write your controller within that block, in order to ensure the motor is powered on when in use and powered off if an error is thrown or the program ends.

To control a motor that has been set up for MIT control over the CAN bus, you can create a TMotorManager_mit_can object, as shown below for an AK80-9 with CAN ID 3.

from TMotorCANControl.TMotorManager_mit_can import TMotorManager_mit_can
with TMotorManager_mit_can(motor_type='AK80-9', motor_ID=3) as dev:
    dev.update()

To control a motor that has been set up for Servo control over the CAN bus, you can create a TMotorManager_servo_can object, as shown below for an AK80-9 with CAN ID 3.

from TMotorCANControl.TMotorManager_servo_can import TMotorManager_servo_can
with TMotorManager_servo_can(motor_type='AK80-9', motor_ID=3) as dev:
    dev.update()

To control a motor that has been set up for MIT control over the CAN bus, you can create a TMotorManager_servo_serial object, as shown below for an AK80-9 on usb serial port 'dev/tty/USB0', with baud rate 921600 (the default).

from TMotorCANControl.TMotorManager_servo_serial import TMotorManager_servo_serial
with TMotorManager_servo_serial(port='/dev/ttyUSB0', baud=921600, motor_params=Servo_Params_Serial['AK80-9']) as dev:
    dev.update()

The motor can be controlled in a variety of modes, depending on which communication setup you are using, as shown below.

Control Mode MIT CAN Servo CAN Servo Serial
Current yes yes yes
Velocity yes yes yes
Position yes yes yes
Duty Cycle no yes yes
Impedance with feedforward Current yes no no
Position with velocity/acceleration limits no yes yes

Once entered, the motor can be controlled in any of these modes by setting the TMotorManager's internal command, and then calling the update() method to send the command. The values of the internal command can be set with the following methods, if available for the communication protocol you are using.

  • set_output_angle_radians(pos): Sets the position command to "pos" radians.
  • set_motor_current_qaxis_amps(current): Sets the current command to "current" amps.
  • set_duty_cycle_percent(duty): (only in servo mode, CAN or serial) Set the duty cycle to the specified percentage ratio, between 0 and 1.
  • set_output_torque_newton_meters(torque): Sets the current command based on the torque supplied.
  • set_output_velocity_radians_per_second(vel): Sets velocity command to "vel" rad/s.
  • set_motor_torque_newton_meters(torque): Sets torque command based on the torque specified, adjusted for the gear ratio to control motor-side torque.
  • set_motor_angle_radians(pos): Sets position command based on the position specified, adjusted for the gear ratio to control motor-side position.
  • set_motor_velocity_radians_per_second(vel): Sets velocity command based on the velocity specified, adjusted for the gear ratio to control motor-side velocity.

Furthermore, the motor state can be accessed with the following methods. The state is updated every time the update() method is called, which are pretty self explanitory.

  • get_current_qaxis_amps()
  • get_output_angle_radians()
  • get_output_velocity_radians_per_second()
  • get_output_acceleration_radians_per_second_squared()
  • get_output_torque_newton_meters()
  • get_motor_angle_radians()
  • get_motor_velocity_radians_per_second()
  • get_motor_acceleration_radians_per_second_squared()
  • get_motor_torque_newton_meters()
  • get_motor_error_code()

The following are available only for servo mode over the serial bus:

  • get_current_daxis_amps()
  • get_current_bus_amps()
  • get_voltage_qaxis_volts()
  • get_voltage_daxis_volts()
  • get_voltage_bus_volts()

The getters and setters above are also combined into properties for ease of use.

  • current_qaxis: q-axis current in Amps
  • position: output angle in rad (after gearbox)
  • velocity: output velocity in rad/s (after gearbox)
  • acceleration: output acceleration in rad/s/s (after gearbox)
  • torque: output torque in Nm (after gearbox)
  • position_motorside: motor-side angle in rad (before gearbox)
  • velocity_motorside: motor-side velocity in rad/s (before gearbox)
  • acceleration_motorside: motor-side acceleration in rad/s/s (before gearbox)
  • torque_motorside: motor-side torque in Nm (before gearbox)

And for servo mode over the serial bus only:

  • current_daxis: d-axis current in Amps
  • current_bus: input current in Amps
  • voltage_qaxis: q-axis voltage in Volts
  • voltage_daxis: d-axis voltage in Volts
  • voltage_bus: input voltage in Volts

Another notable function is the zero_position() function, which sends a command to the motor to zero it's current angle. This function will shut off control of the motor for about a half second while the motor zeros (sort of like zeroing a scale, it seems to record a few points to get a good measurement). As such, after calling the method you should delay for at least 500 ms if timely communication is important.

The following example would instantiate a TMotorManager for an AK80-9 motor with a CAN ID of 3, logging into a CSV file named "log.csv", with the full set of log variables specified above. Then it will zero the motor position and wait long enough for the motor to be done zeroing. Finally, it will enter impedance control mode with gains of 10Nm/rad and 0.5Nm/(rad/s). It then will set the motor position to 3.14 radians until the program is exited.

with TMotorManager_mit_can(motor_type='AK80-9', motor_ID=3) as dev:
    dev.set_zero_position()
    time.sleep(1.5)
    dev.set_impedance_gains_real_unit(K=10,B=0.5)
    loop = SoftRealtimeLoop(dt = 0.01, report=True, fade=0)

    for t in loop:
        dev.update()
        dev.position = 3.14

For more examples, see the demos folder. Have fun controlling some CubeMars Motors!

Other Resources

  1. Setup Instructions on the OSL Website

  2. API Documentation

  3. AK-series motor manual The documentation for the AK-series TMotors, which includes the CAN protocol and how to use R-Link

  4. PiCAN 2 CAN Bus Hat The documentation for the CopperHill Raspberry Pi CAN hat.

  5. RLink Youtube videos Yoyo's youtube channel has some tutorials on how to use the RLink software.

  6. Mini-Cheetah-TMotor-Python-Can This is another, more low-level library for controlling these motors in MIT mode.

This work is performed by Mitry Anderson and Vamsi Peddinti.