Re: TB6600 / HY-DIV268N-5A Problems, and possible solutions
Phil,
Useful info there and it sounds like you're making headway into solving this - if so it would be invaluable to add your findings to this thread as you go, for the next poor soul who buys these (I also have 5 of these lying around... definitely not TB6600s, despite the eBay ad claiming them to be so - I think there's a hint as to the max voltage printed on the enclosure - I think (I'm at work at the moment) that the TB6600-based ones advertise themselves at upto 48V operating, whereas your's (and mine) at 40V are the little SMD devices. I'll also caution that the opto-isolators on that board are (according to datasheet) pretty sluggish devices - but chase one problem at a time and see if your thermal solution resolves your problems.
Re: TB6600 / HY-DIV268N-5A Problems, and possible solutions
Well, I did the thermal treatment on Y and it didn't overheat and the heatsink got a lot hotter, which is great. I then did the same job on the other axes and put them all back (in different order, probably), this time the Z failed. Now I've heat-treated a spare and swapped that in, so trying again.
Ultimately I'd like to actually buy a real TB6600 controller and try that, anyone know of a good supplier for those? Not seen one in the UK yet that looks pucker, but Far East will do!
Thanks,
Phil
Re: TB6600 / HY-DIV268N-5A Problems, and possible solutions
Phil,
These are the ones that I bought...
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Single-Ax...vbgiYCPuIMIsVA
Although my seller went under the name of "bigger*gift", but we all know the Chinese are a little agile with their naming. I think the discriminator is the 50V and 5A rating.
I'd caution, however, the subject of this thread and that mine, bought April/17 required the opto-isolators replacing.
Re: TB6600 / HY-DIV268N-5A Problems, and possible solutions
OK thanks, I just bought two that look just like that, with the higher voltage and current rating. I can replace the optos as this thread details.
Meanwhile, I just ran a large job at 2x speed and it made it through the job twice without tripping, so maybe I'll be OK for milling polystyrene - will wait a while before putting the actual lump of wood under it though!
-Phil