Re: Stepper motors
- From: "john jardine" <john.jardine@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 22:48:52 -0000
"Periproct" <Periproct@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Io-dnbJhf5wg17vanZ2dnUVZ8sSrnZ2d@xxxxxxxxx
I'm setting up a small CNC mill to educate myself before taking the plungeand
on a larger machine and I have a few questions about the stepper motors
stepper driver boards.according
Firstly, the motors have what looks like 7/0.2 wires attached and
to the people I bought the machine from they are rated at 2 amps. Surely
that is very fine wire for so high a current.
Not an unusual size. The stepper driver can still force 2 amps through it,
even with many ohms of internal/external wire resistance.
My
Secondly, the driver boards have an potentiometer to adjust the current.
simple mind says the motors will take the current they require or is this
some kind of current limiting.
It -would- take the current it needs, if only you supplied the motor with
it's normal working voltage, which may only be about 2Vdc.
I'll bet though that your controller is being fed from something like a
24-40Vdc supply.
The idea is for the drive PCB to force a fixed (usually marked on
nameplate), controlled current through the motor winding, that will not be
affected by connecting wire resistances, or the evil, increasing coil
impedance which is a big problem at faster and faster stepping rates.
One problem is, that as the driver PCB has so much voltage headroom to play
with, a careless setting of the current adjust pot will happily force say 2
Amps through a 1/4 amp motor. A minute later and the motor is toast.
The driver PCB doesn't mind what's on the end of it's wires.
Lastly, would it be sensible to adjust the boards to a slightly lower
current?
I've set all three boards to 2 amp and already killed one board.
Yes. Set the current lower. You can always wind it up later if more
performance is needed. I'd start at maybe 1/2 amp (or less) and see how it
goes.
At continuous full rated current, the motors bodies can run -very- hot. This
is most noticeable with the motors stopped or doing little work.
Because of this waste of power some drive boards allow entering a
low-current/sleep mode, if no steps have been sent for a couple of seconds.
This can be about 10%-50% of nominal current.
.
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