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17-08-2013 #1
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18-08-2013 #2
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18-08-2013 #3
House prices are rising, everything else will follow?
If the nagging gets really bad......Get a bigger shed:naughty:
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18-08-2013 #4
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18-08-2013 #5
That's easy sorted.?? . . . .change both.!!
Now on another serious note.? if you haven't bought the screws yet then you don't want to be buying the electrics. Only buy the electrics when you need to fit them has just having them to spin on the bench is wasting the warranty and you won't learn anything from it.!!
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18-08-2013 #6
Rouge the only thing i can say to that is what is more important you? On another site i saws omething that i liked, just came out on the market. I decided then and there to buy it. 6 hours later they doubled the price? and that was from China, go figure?
I know what you mean about work though it has to come first so it sounds like you have answered your own question and it will have to stay on hold. Hope you get there soon, bank managers are a PITA to please.If the nagging gets really bad......Get a bigger shed:naughty:
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18-08-2013 #7
Wise words indeed, though (i) the steppers are already outside of a year old and (ii) in any event I've got 6 years to bring a claim for breach of SoGA; warranties do not do what most people think they do. Entirely academic as I'd not pursue that route for a hundred quid's worth of motors, and probably not even for three hundred quid's worth of drivers. Point taken, though, hassle is worth avoiding where possible.
In fact, taking that on board, I might shift my plans around a bit. I'll still finish up the PSU first because it's nearly finished anyway!
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18-08-2013 #8
If you have already bought the toroidal I say go for it, something else could crock the project and fixing the PSU would only waste money.
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The problem with transformers is that when you rectify them to DC the voltage drops when you draw power. You can stuff capacitors in until the cows come home but if you don't rectify all 3 phases, the volts will sag.
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Similarly the volts will soar if you get a mains surge so you really need to protect your drivers if they don't protect themselves. Fortunately protection is cheap and easy if you use a crowbar circuit and wire a diac to blow a fuse on the DC side if you go over volts. A crowbar circuit is cheap and simple. Leave yourself a note by the fuse because it is very easy to forget it is there even after it just saved you hundreds of pounds
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