-
12-01-2015 #1
It would be handy to have some sort of indicator to show how hard a CNC router is working. On my old machine I just play it by ear but sometimes that does not work and all sounds fine an the next moment the bit is broken. I once saw a video of some fancy VMC that had a little electronic dial meter showing cutting force. It did not show an actual force reading but more like a green, yellow and red band, if that makes sense. Do you perhaps have any idea how something like works? Strain gauges or maybe load cells come to mind but I can't see a feasible way of fitting those to a DIY router?
On my build the spindle power is likely to be the weak spot so I'm thinking if I can see how hard that is working under certain conditions it would give me a more scientific reference point. On my VFD I have an analog output that I can set to output current (virtual) and then hook that to an old school analog type 0-12V volt meter. Not sure what current "virtual" means as the in this context but I'm assuming the current the motor is pulling will give me a good indication of how hard its working. Does this sound like a workable plan or I'm just wasting my time?
-
12-01-2015 #2
Maybe the vfd has a screen ? yoiu can display current on that.
There was this thread a while back;
http://www.mycncuk.com/threads/7482-...ighlight=bladeLast edited by EddyCurrent; 12-01-2015 at 10:51 AM.
Spelling mistakes are not intentional, I only seem to see them some time after I've posted
-
A current sensor on the power rail perhaps? I think they are usually Hall effect and dirt cheap.
-
12-01-2015 #4
Thanks for the replies, gents and interesting link. My VFD is one of the cheapies (I think Sunfar E300) so does not have a torque output, only volts,amps and frequency as far as I know. Yep, I can display current on the VFD's display, but maybe to rephrase my question: Do you think that the Current reading as produced by the VFD is a good indicator of cutting force or is there a better way to measure or derive cutting force? Sorry I know little about how these motors actually work and I'm assuming it will use more current under higher load?
-
12-01-2015 #5
As a first approximation, yes the spindle will draw more current as the load increases. The problem is the motor efficiency changes with load and speed, so it's tricky to estimate the actual torque output, though not impossible. If you subtract the no-load current from the current whilst cutting, that's a good start. But if you're more interested in not overloading the spindle, then just looking at the phase current as a proportion of the rated current is sensible.
I'd almost forgotten about that thread discussing linking torque to feedrate, but I've got a bit further with my motor drive I will use in it so it wont be too long now.Last edited by Jonathan; 12-01-2015 at 01:15 PM.
-
12-01-2015 #6
Thanks Jonathan. Call it cheap thrills but I'm basically looking into some interesting little future enhancements to make to my router once I have it working to keep me occupied. I'll play around a little to see what the no load current looks like at different frequencies and take it from there. Until my spindle is actually cutting something, is there a safe way to put some load on to see what happens to that current output? The though had crossed my mind to put a thick glove on and gently apply pressure to the collet nut but I'm way too scared to be the first guy to try that :-)
Your plan of automatically varying the feed rate or spindle speed sounds like a very cool idea or maybe even just to do a estop when it figures out its about to break a certain size cutter or stall the spindle but I'll have to learn quite a bit more before I can join in on that fun :-)
-
12-01-2015 #7
If you're keen you could take several readings, graph them then use that as a look-up table or function to subtract from the on-load current in software, on an Arduino (or similar), then connect a display... In fact you could do it quite easily with an Arduino, current sensor and display:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/New-Blue-I...item3f3eb02c30
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Range-ACS7...item565bbee604
You wouldn't be the first ;)
-
12-01-2015 #8
Arduino. Yep those are very high on my list of things to toy with, just wasn't sure what I'd use it for but now I have a plan!
Sorry last stupid question. Using this approach with that sensor would I measure current on then single phase input side of the vfd or on the output side or does it even matter?
-
12-01-2015 #9
-
12-01-2015 #10
Last edited by EddyCurrent; 12-01-2015 at 09:14 PM.
Spelling mistakes are not intentional, I only seem to see them some time after I've posted
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Similar Threads
-
metric thread dial indicator
By Raymond in forum Lathes, Lathe Rebuilding & ConversionsReplies: 0Last Post: 12-06-2014, 08:10 PM -
Help with Supply Indicator Lights
By GTJim in forum General ElectronicsReplies: 7Last Post: 03-09-2013, 08:49 PM -
pulley fit on motor shaft - force it on?
By dsc in forum Belt Drive, Pulleys & TimingReplies: 2Last Post: 09-08-2013, 06:11 AM -
Co axial centering indicator
By Robin Hewitt in forum Tool & Tooling TechnologyReplies: 13Last Post: 03-02-2012, 07:49 PM -
Drilling force monitering/chipped drill detection/1000's of holes in SS
By PatK in forum Tool & Tooling TechnologyReplies: 3Last Post: 27-09-2011, 11:57 PM
Bookmarks