James Watt's
steam engine governor is generally considered the first powered feedback system. The
windmill fantail is an earlier example of automatic control, but since it does not have an
amplifier or
gain, it is not usually considered a servomechanism. The first feedback position control device was the ship
steering engine, used to position the rudder of large ships based on the position of the ship's wheel.
John McFarlane Gray was a pioneer. His patented design was used on the
SS Great Eastern in 1866.
Joseph Farcot may deserve equal credit for the feedback concept, with several patents between 1862 and 1868. The telemotor was invented around 1872 by
Andrew Betts Brown, allowing elaborate mechanisms between the control room and the engine to be greatly simplified. Steam steering engines had the characteristics of a modern servomechanism: an input, an output, an error signal, and a means for amplifying the error signal used for negative feedback to drive the error towards zero. The Ragonnet
power reverse mechanism was a general purpose air or steam-powered servo amplifier for linear motion patented in 1909. Electrical servomechanisms were used as early as 1888 in
Elisha Gray's
Telautograph. Electrical servomechanisms require a power amplifier.
World War II saw the development of electrical
fire-control servomechanisms, using an
amplidyne as the power amplifier.
Vacuum tube amplifiers were used in the
UNISERVO tape drive for the
UNIVAC I computer. The Royal Navy began experimenting with Remote Power Control (
RPC) on
HMS Champion in 1928 and began using RPC to control searchlights in the early 1930s. During WW2 RPC was used to control gun mounts and gun directors. Modern servomechanisms use solid state power amplifiers, usually built from
MOSFET or
thyristor devices. Small servos may use power
transistors. The origin of the word is believed to come from the French "
Le Servomoteur" or the slavemotor, first used by J. J. L. Farcot in 1868 to describe hydraulic and steam engines for use in ship steering. The simplest kind of servos use
bang–bang control. More complex control systems use proportional control,
PID control, and state space control, which are studied in
modern control theory. ==Types of performances==