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View Full Version : eBay TB6560 Stepper Motor Driver Boards



irving2008
26-12-2009, 01:02 AM
A couple of members have bought these boards and experienced problems using them above 24v... due to exploding TB6560 chips. I note that there are some further cases documented on CNCZone.

After researching the chips and the circumstances under which they were used I suspect the TB6560 chip is susceptible to transients, particularly back-emf from high inductance motors, leading to catastrophic failure.

The majority of circumstances where the problems have occurred have been with motors having inductances >10mH in the configuration they were wired and with supply voltages >24v (typically 30v).

I have noted elsewhere (CNCZone) that there is some debate about the quality of the protection diodes, certainly the part numbers suggested make these unlikely to be much use.

There is a note on the TB6560 datasheet which is telling:

If your design includes an inductive load such as a motor coil, incorporate a protection circuit into

the design to prevent device malfunction or breakdown caused by the current resulting from the
inrush current at power ON or the negative current resulting from the back electromotive force at
power OFF. IC breakdown may cause injury, smoke or ignition.
Use a stable power supply with ICs with built-in protection functions. If the power supply is
unstable, the protection function may not operate, causing IC breakdown. IC breakdown may cause
injury, smoke or ignition. this is in the 2007 datasheet, but not in the 2006 one.

The failure often occurs on switch on, but it is likely that the damage is being done at switch off. It is important that the driver board is disabled and the motors are not powered before switching off. You need to ensure that the PC is driving a suitable ENABLE line from the software that will power down all motors before you turn off the supply to the board. And ensure the PC is on and the enable line stable before powring up the driver cards.

In short, these boards are a cheap option and will work OK as long as you stay inside the 24v power supply limit. Also note that the maximum current limit setting on the board is fixed at 1.5A, not the 3A stated in the ads. It is possible to run these at 3A by reducing the on-board resistors but they need better (faster) protection diodes.

Note, despite what the supplier may say, the voltage is NOT a function of the size of motor - it makes not a jot of difference what size motor frame you are using (NEMA17, 23, 34), its the inductance of the motor and the supply voltage that matter.

elecom
26-12-2009, 11:15 AM
thanks for all your time you put in this

im waiting to get an e-mail from the chap i keep you posted

phil

elecom
26-12-2009, 11:27 AM
the psu i got from ebay is 360w 24v upto 42v it says it douse

nope maximum 38v 2 moltimeter tested it


oh why nothing seems to be correct i buy lol

model number fdps-360a

thanks

Lee Roberts
27-12-2009, 05:13 PM
What did they say elecom ?

elecom
27-12-2009, 10:50 PM
thanks for all your time

there going to replace the burnt out chip and pay for postage two and from there place

i asked them to change the 4 chips but no replay

so im posting out on monday air mail to china

hope there give me new board

phil hanglin

elecom
27-12-2009, 10:52 PM
its fun trying to find a box to send it in

elecom
27-12-2009, 10:54 PM
i glad i keep my old boxes (wing commander 3) will do nicely give him some history lol

Lee Roberts
28-12-2009, 01:22 AM
Lmao!.....

irving2008
01-01-2010, 03:21 AM
OK, Mariss over on CNCZone (of Gecko fame) has posted some thoughts which concur with my views on this... these boards are really only good for 1.8A and 30v maximum, IF you have a decent smoothing capacitor on the power supply (he recommends at least 1000uF and I'd suggest 2,200uF as a minimum - for more info read the thread here (http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showpost.php?p=710643&postcount=55)) If you are testing on a single axis and a switched mode PSU with no additional capacitor then beware as there is nowhere for the back-EMF energy to go.

myoldmachine
05-04-2010, 02:47 PM
Hello
I have purchased on e of these boards. They give two options, one at max 3.5amp and one at max 2.5amp. I picked the lower one as I want to run 0.5amp steppers. Do you know what the difference in electronics is between the two.
If you have details of the pin connections for Kcam, they would be very welcome.
Many Thanks

irving2008
05-04-2010, 05:20 PM
The only difference is the resistors that set the maximum output current. There are 4 switch settings on the board that set the current limit at 25, 50, 75 and 100% of the maximum. The original boards I looked at were set up for either 1.5 or 2.2A maximum. I have seen the ads for the 2.5 and 3.5A versions (the settings therefore are .6/1.3/1.9/2.5 or .9/1.8/2.6/3.5) but the chip is not going to handle more than 2.5A anyway without a bigger heatsink than the one fitted. At 0.5A and 24V these boards will be fine.

I'm sorry but I have no idea for KCam, never used it, but the standard setup for parallel port is pin 1 enable or charge pump, pins 2,3 X step/dir, pins 4,5 Y step/dir, pins 6,7 Z step/dir

myoldmachine
05-04-2010, 06:26 PM
Thanks for the info. Been learning a lot since I have joined your forum, resistors red red silver gold etc.
found the data on K cam 1,7, X , 8,3, Y, 5,4 Z all STEP / DIR
Thanks Again

1113562
06-04-2010, 11:51 PM
I have just bought the higher power board which although states uses a 3.5 A peak Toshiba chipset is rated at 3 Amps max as a board. From what I can gather the difference beween the two boards is not just the current select resistors but also the Toshiba Chopper PWM chips fitted.

The data sheet states:

IOUT = AHQ: 3.5 A (peak)
IOUT = AFG: 2.5 A (peak)

The lower current board may well be fitted with the lowe spec TB65600AFG chip rather than the AHQ, its worth looking into. I have downloaded the Toshiba data sheet if you are interested.

Have you managed to work out what the mating connector is for the limit switches/eStop inputs on these boards? Its a small 5 way polarised vertical PCB connector. My board was not supplied with the mating cable ended part that I need to fit to my switch wires.

John

myoldmachine
07-04-2010, 04:48 PM
They are AHQ chips.
The problem I have at the moment is Y &Z work ok, but I just get a permanent 24v out of both X outputs. It doesn't switch off
or change polarity
help!!??!! anybody