Help! Stepper stalls high speed problem?

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23 Nov 2022 07:53 #257437 by xingfenkou3
First post and wish i had found this forum a few months ago 

They say stepper motor suppliers love newbies

I have a Warco wm18 mill and have added a power z axis stepper but it stalls at high speed

This is the driver i am using - www.oyostepper.com/goods-111-Digital-Ste...4-Stepper-Motor.html

This is the stepper motor - www.oyostepper.com/goods-493-Nema-17-Ste...rinterExtruder-.html

This is the power supply - www.oyostepper.com/goods-914-Mean-Well-L...ng-Power-Supply.html

I have set the driver to 4.2a and i think, can't remember without opening enclosure, to 1600 steps/rev

It works quite well but tends to stall at max speed especially raising the head. For info the head does have a gas strut helper

so where have i gone wrong?

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23 Nov 2022 09:22 #257442 by aleksamc
I think decreasing the speed will solve your problem ...

But if seriously - you give not to much information to understand more... Attach please configuration files for your servos.
What maximum speed you have? Does steppers are configured right?

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23 Nov 2022 09:45 #257443 by Clive S
I have converted 2 WM18s 
In my opinion nema 17 are a bit small . I would use nema 23 with a drive that will handle at least 60V so a bigger power supply as well.
Welcome to the forum .
 

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23 Nov 2022 10:26 #257444 by rodw
24v for motors is not enough. I learnt the hard way too. The motors are only 1.5 amps so don't exceed that.
Doubling the voltage will quadruple motor torque. Look for a 48v power supply for your stepper drivers. Say 7-10 amps
Try that first but I suspect you will need to upgrade the motors as stated earlier. At least you will have the drives and power for them.
I know a friend with a very early Syil which was based on a Seig SX3 which is a similar size. It uses a NEMA34 on the Z axis.... and NEMA 23's for X & Y

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23 Nov 2022 12:10 #257455 by tommylight
Nema 17 is to small, it says extruder motor on the link.
@RodW
Doubling voltage does not quadruple torque on stepper systems, it raises the usable high end RPM by a lot.
-
As mentioned, use a Nema 23 stepper, try to find a low inductance one, those are much better for higher speeds and can be used with 24V for most applications.

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25 Nov 2022 03:04 #257592 by rodw

@RodW
Doubling voltage does not quadruple torque on stepper systems, it raises the usable high end RPM by a lot.
 

And increases power and torque 
www.geckodrive.com/support/motor-power
Where the OP is in the journey, its easier for him to increase the power supply voltage than to make new mounts for his existing motors. He will get improved performance but whether it is enough is another matter.

On my first stepper project, I used 24 volts and suffered from lost steps. Replacing the power supply with a 48 V one solved that due to increased power and torque offered,

There is a lot less work following my suggestions  v's replacing motors and the higher voltage will also get better performace with NEMA23's. Long term he probably needs to do both but he might get some improvement quite easilly by changing the power supply, Who knows, that may let him machine some nice mounts for nemaa 23's too. :)
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25 Nov 2022 10:56 #257605 by tommylight
It does not make it correct info if it is on Geckodrive website, Rod.
I am sure Marius did not write that as he knows his stuff very good.
Marius, i think that was his name, is the owner of geckodrive.
A stepper motor at 2A will have the same power and torque, no matter how many volts you provide to the drive, at standstill and low RPM.
At higher RPM it will raise the power and torque by a lot.
Induction, i always mention here to get low inductance motors as they can spin faster with lower voltages.
Vexta and Oriental have some very good videos on youtube explaining that in great detail.
All stepper motors have torque charts, some will have those for 2 or 3 different voltages feed to the drive, it can be clearly seen how the torque remains the same at low RPM, but goes much higher at higher RPM with higher voltage.
And, higher and lower RPM in stepper systems is a relative term, some will do only 100RPM with usable torque, some 500RPM, with the same 24V and same drive. That is inductance, or visualy, a tank filling with water by a small tube, higher pressure/current = faster fill, smaller tank/inductance = faster fill, etc, etc.

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25 Nov 2022 12:37 - 25 Nov 2022 12:39 #257619 by rodw
Tommy, sorry you are wrong. As you increase the voltage, the torque curve lifts as shown here for a random Moon Industries NEMA 23. Moon are an industrial quality manufacturer up there with Sanyo Denki
 
In this graph I added a 48 volt plot using Moon's cool customisable graphing module on the product web page. Compare that with the 24 volt plot. You will note torque has increased
www.moonsindustries.com/p/nema-23-standa...0-000004611110011248
But yes, you definitely increase the top end speed as well as torque so you can harness more of that torque  with reduction gearing.
The temperature goes up by 44 deg but if you add 35 deg ambient to 44, we end up with 79 deg well below the maximum temp of 130 deg the insulation is rated to.

As a general rule, low inductance motors perform better, but I am yet to be convinced it is the best parameter to design to.
In all of the 100s of drives I benchmarked in our stepper design model that was developed over several months, inductance is definitely not relevant. Its much more important to match the rotational inertia of the system with the motor's rotational inertia. Ideally, you want a 1:1 relationship and  it needs to be below 1:1 to prevent the motor from burning up. A low ratio implies the motor is underutilised (eg. too big for the application)

Take for example the amazing NEMA 24 Sanyo Denki  103H7823-5740, it has high inductance of 9.5 but a very high rotor inertia of 840 g/cm^2. I suspect the size of the rotor is the reason why this is only a 2 amp motor as there is not much room for the coil windings! But it outperforms all motors in its class. I've benchmarked it to over 60 m/min and  settled on a safe 5m/sec/sec accelleration with a 30mm pinion and 3:1 motor reduction.

What I did learn with all the benchmarking I did is that design of stepper motor motion systems is complex and poorly understood. Its much easier to design servo driven motion systems.
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25 Nov 2022 17:50 #257633 by tommylight
I am not wrong, read my post again and watch the graph, there is no change in torque at low RPM, at all, not even at 12V!
This is getting tedious, several times i said the exact same thing, it does not increase anything at low RPM, it increase everything at higher RPM.

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25 Nov 2022 19:08 #257636 by JPL
@tommylight is right

See attached document. This is the older version made by Marius from Geckodrive. The first 3 pages explains this very well.

Basically:
- Torque vs Voltage curves clearly shows that voltage is irrevelant at low speed.
- Higher supply voltage will reduce current thus I2 x R loss. This apply ONLY to higher speed.
- Double 2x voltage will generate 2x torque at higher speed (theorically, although slightly less in real application)
- Inductance is the real enemy, this is why larger motor have a torque/speed curve dropiing much faster than smaller motor.

 

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