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I made car1 run on circles for 50 seconds with fixed PWM and steer input for a total of 16 runs. Every run was performed starting from the same battery voltage of 16.7V. The full data gathered and the detailed description of how the experiments were performed can be found in my folder on Dropbox in "../backup/data/circle_7-27-2013". All the images below are obtained by filtering the encoder signal with a moving average window to discard the large part of the noise.

Figure pwm.png shows the speed of the car obtained by keep the steer constant and varying the PWM. The relationship between PWM and velocity is quite linear. For some reason, when the steer input is high, the speed observed with PWM 140 is slightly lower than I would expect.On  On the other hand, the steer effect seems to be a little bit more complicated (see steer.png). Velocities observed for steer 92 and 120 are always very close. This may be due to the fact that curvature radius for the two steer input are very similar (the curvature radius is not linear with respect to the steer signal). Still the speed is not linear w.r.t. the curvature radius because the discrepancy between the speed for steer 36 and 64 (which I measured to have respectively a curvature radius of roughly 200cm and 100cm) tends to be reduced by decreasing the PWM.

EFFECT OF THE BATTERY ON THE SPEED DYNAMICS

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