Because in motion control, as in life, the angle is everything. And nobody ever explained the angle better than Moog. This feature is a tribute to the technical writers, applications engineers, and analog designers at Moog Inc. who created and maintained the Synchro and Resolver Engineering Handbook—a work that continues to turn up on desks from Cape Canaveral to Shenzhen.
The most revered section was always the troubleshooting guide. “Synchro system hunting?” the handbook would ask. “Check velocity damping. Increase tachometer gain or add a lead network.” “Null voltage too high?” “Verify orthogonality of stator windings.” It was diagnostic jazz, not simple checklists.
The resolver is its more refined sibling, using two output windings (sine and cosine) rather than three. This makes it mathematically purer and, therefore, the darling of aerospace and defense applications. Synchro And Resolver Engineering Handbook Moog Inc
The handbook was Moog’s bid to standardize the industry. Before it, every defense contractor had their own way of testing, specifying, and wiring these components. Noise margins varied wildly, compensation networks were treated as dark arts, and a resolver from one vendor might not talk to a servo amp from another. Moog’s engineers, led by a cadre of analog gurus whose names are now lost to corporate history, sat down and wrote the canonical text.
And then there were the application diagrams. Beautiful, messy schematics showing how to use a single resolver to measure both azimuth and elevation via a mechanical differential. Circuits for “electronic gearing” that predated digital motion controllers by twenty years. A diagram for a “synchro-to-digital converter” built from discrete comparators, counters, and a precision D/A converter—a project that would take a month to debug but teach you more about sampling theory than any textbook. By the late 1990s, the writing was on the wall. Optical encoders with 16-bit resolution were dropping in price. Resolver-to-digital (R/D) converters existed as single-chip solutions from Analog Devices or DDC. The need to understand the analog soul of a resolver seemed to be fading. Because in motion control, as in life, the
Moreover, the handbook teaches a mindset. It teaches that a position sensor is not a black box that spits out bits. It is an impedance network, a transformer with a rotating coupling coefficient, a source of quadrature error and harmonic distortion. To truly debug a motion system, you must think like the handbook: with a vector network analyzer in one hand and a deep respect for analog imperfections in the other. If you are lucky enough to find an original printed copy from the 1980s—spiral-bound, with a faded blue cover and the old Moog “M” logo—you possess a piece of engineering history. Flip to any random page. You will see hand-drawn figures, typewritten equations (with corrections in pen from some long-ago applications engineer), and a purity of purpose that modern documentation rarely achieves.
In a conference room in East Aurora, New York (Moog’s global headquarters), there is probably a worn copy on a shelf. And somewhere right now, an engineer is opening a PDF of that same handbook. They are trying to figure out why their resolver’s sine-cosine mismatch is 0.5% at 25°C but 1.2% at 85°C. They will find the answer in a footnote on page 4-17. And they will be grateful. who created and maintained the Synchro and Resolver
In the pantheon of great technical reference manuals—texts like Radar Handbook (Skolnik) or The Art of Electronics (Horowitz & Hill)—there exists a quieter, more specialized volume. Its spine is often cracked, its pages smudged with the fingerprints of three generations of engineers. It is the Synchro and Resolver Engineering Handbook from Moog Inc.
For over half a century, this handbook has been more than a product catalog. It is a Rosetta Stone for translating the physical world of rotating machinery into the precise, unforgiving language of electronic feedback. Before optical encoders became cheap and ubiquitous, before Hall-effect sensors saturated the market, the synchro and the resolver were the undisputed kings of angular measurement. And Moog Inc.—a company more famous for its hydraulics on fighter jets and amusement park rides—wrote the definitive text on how to wield them.
Moog’s handbook didn’t just explain what they were; it explained how to weaponize them . It provided the transfer functions, the Scott-T transformer connections to convert three-wire synchro data to two-wire resolver data, and the critical error budgets that separate a functioning radar dish from a gimbal lock in an inertial navigation system. The handbook emerged from a specific historical cauldron: the Cold War aerospace boom of the 1960s. Moog, founded by William C. Moog (whose brother, “Bill” Moog, invented the Moog synthesizer—a neat footnote of analog genius running in the family), was already the leader in high-performance servovalves.