Thread: Confused about stepper sizing
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22-09-2017 #1
Hi
My mechanical build is almost complete 20mm HiWin rails and bearings on X & Y axes with 2010 lead screws X axis is 1500mm and Y axes are 1000mm. Total weight of my gantry including the spindle is around 40Kg and I've been trying to calculate what size motors I need for my axes, but both my own calculations, and the output from several online motor calculators are giving me results that I wasn't expecting.
For example on the Y axis with a total load of 40Kg and a cutting force of 5N my total required torque @ 80 rpm (800mm/min) is coming out with a figure of around 0.18Nm, this would easily be achievable with the 175oz Nema 23 stepper on the openbuilds store which should put out around 0.7 Nm @ 48v and 80 rpm.
My gut instinct was to go for motors in the 400+ oz range, which seems to be what everybody recommends for this sort of size machine. Are my torque calculations way off or is there another reason that I need to massively overspec my motors?Last edited by Jeff; 22-09-2017 at 01:49 PM.
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Hi Jeff and welcome to the forum. In my opinion I would go with nema 23 3.1Nm from cnc4you and get AM882 drives from China and run them at 68V with a toroidal transformer power supply.
..Clive
The more you know, The better you know, How little you know
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22-09-2017 #3
Hi Clive, I had looked at the motors from cnc4you before I confused myself with my calculations. I think I know where I stuffed it up I was getting confused about feed rates inches/m vs mm/m the speeds I used in my calculations are way too low. I'll do them again at around 10000mm/min and see where that leads me :)
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22-09-2017 #4
Yeah that was where I was going wrong :). The 4Nm motors from cnc4you will give me cutting speeds of around 3000 mm/min and rapids around 10000 mm/min (which is as high as I can go due to the critical speed of the ballscrew), on a 48v supply with a 3x margin. 68V is way above the ideal voltage for these motors (3.0mH inductance) so I think I'll stick with 48V rather than turn my motors into workshop heaters :)
I'll probably get the CWD556 DSP drivers from there too.
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22-09-2017 #668V is way above the ideal voltage for these motors
If you'll be cutting wood, you'll quickly find out that 3m/min is quite slow.Gerry
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UCCNC 2022 Screenset
Mach3 2010 Screenset
JointCAM - CAM for Woodworking Joints
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22-09-2017 #7
I was basing the "ideal" voltage on the 32 x Square Root of inductance which, in the case of the cnc4you steppers would be 55v. The information on the Gecko website seems to infer that voltages above this "ideal" will just produce more heat through iron losses with negligeable torque gains. If you guys are using 68v without issue that would suggest the mathematical "ideal" and the real "idea" are not one and the same thing :)
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22-09-2017 #8
It's more important to get the max current right and not worry too much about the voltage. The higher voltage gets the motor current up quicker on each pulse which helps keep the torque up. I'm running 3Nm motors on 68V with no problems, like a lot of people. I'm running 2 X axis motors, 3Nm, each driving 2005 ballscrews. I'm getting critical speed on the ballscrews, very similar size to yours, which is around 5m/min rapids. My gantry is probably heavier than yours as well. When you do the sums, don't forget the inertia of the ballscrew as well - when you get to this size, that value can be as much as the gantry.
Clive'a rule of thumb advice is on the money - do the sums, analyse as much as you like, and the answer's pretty well always 3Nm (4Nm), 68V! No point in going smaller (doesn't save much money anyway) and bigger gives worse performance.
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22-09-2017 #9
5-10 years ago, the owner of Gecko used to post on the forums quite a bit. He used to say that the ideal voltage, was the lowest voltage required to provide the performance that you need. And any excess voltage is wasted energy and heat.
They then came up with a formula that was the theoretical maximum (not "ideal") voltage. As all motors are different, this formula isn't a firm rule, even though their website will lead you to believe that.
Here's the main issue.
In an industrial application, a stepper motor would be sized to have 30%-50% more power than the application required, to insure the motor will never lose steps.
In the DIY CNC world, a motor is selected, and then the user tries to run that motor as fast as he possibly can. This requires throwing more and more voltage at it. With better drives, like AM882's or EM806's, the current reduction, and other features, can allow you to run at much higher voltages, without the motor overheating. Mounting your motor to a big block of aluminum also helps keep the motors cool, by acting like a large heatsink.Gerry
______________________________________________
UCCNC 2022 Screenset
Mach3 2010 Screenset
JointCAM - CAM for Woodworking Joints
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22-09-2017 #10
Thanks guys, really great insights.
I guess that the lazy ass part of me thought that 48v was good because I could get away with an off the shelf PSU instead of building a 70v 12A linear :)
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