Quote Originally Posted by Neale View Post
Be interesting to hear if these fuses have ever "saved" anything!
I've already buried the spindle in the work a couple of times, both times have 'gently' blown the VFD fuse before any damage was caused elsewhere. The power loss to the VFD also causes a fault on the controller so stops the motors, which is kinda nice.

Quote Originally Posted by CNCRY View Post
I have this for the cabinet layout - does it look OK or any issues?
Three things spring to mind:
  • VFD Spacing against internal walls. Read the manual for how far it should be away to allow adequate air flow.
  • I'd keep earth near Line and Neutral, thats where it comes in after all, and a lot of the big ticket earthing items will be mains voltage.
  • You've made a good start trying to separate voltage levels, but the 5V PSU should be at the low voltage end of the cabinet rather than its current position near 65V DC.
  • Think about air flow through the cabinet - At the moment your drivers will get decent flow, but the VFD won't. What direction are those fans? I orientated my drivers to allow maximal air flow through their heatsinks, at the moment your heat sinks are at 90 degrees to the air flow.


Will it work in its current state? Sure. None of these things are big issues, just minor points.


Quote Originally Posted by CNCRY View Post
I'm planning to buy these - could someone confirm they are OK choices, especially the contactor! Looks like it is DC

https://www.rapidonline.com/mean-wel...cy-psu-85-5684
https://www.rapidonline.com/schneide...tactor-66-1939
You've gone for the high efficiency and expensive one, is there any reason? This is the alternative to save £10.
https://www.rapidonline.com/mean-wel...il-psu-85-5678

Contactor seems okay.


Quote Originally Posted by CNCRY View Post
Couple other questions from the never ending list:)
- Do I need to Fuse the drivers? They have overcurrent/voltage but I notice some people have?
- Are EMI filters needed with decent star grounding? I'm planning to add the EMI filter option on the transformer.
Extra fuses won't hurt.
The advice I found at the time was that some people needed to plug the VFD in at the other end of the workshop to reduce the noise back from it, and I wanted to be able to power everything from the same socket. The EMI filters I used were about £5 each, and although I have no idea if they're needed or not, they do allow me to operate without noise issues with everything running off the same 13A socket.