Hi,
What is the best way to realign the encoder with a brushless motor.?
I had a good brushless with a bad encoder.
I allready install a new encoder but at hi pps the motor just stops (error from the Rutex drive)
Thanks
Dan
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Hi,
What is the best way to realign the encoder with a brushless motor.?
I had a good brushless with a bad encoder.
I allready install a new encoder but at hi pps the motor just stops (error from the Rutex drive)
Thanks
Dan
If your encoder has three simulated 'Hall' tracks, I have done it with a double beam scope, as follows.
Connect a 10k ¼w resistor to each phase and connect the other three ends together to make a star point. This is you scope common for the first channel and the input lead to the U phase.
the other 'scope channel is for the hall effect output for the U pulse.
Rotate the motor either by hand or by some low speed means and a generated sine wave should be observed on the U phase out. The square hall effect pulse should be then aligned with the the centre of the sinewave output.
The other Hall pulses can be verified the same way with the corresponding motor phase.
Al.
Al,
Thanks for that info. I wouldn't have been able to answer that, but it seems logical.
By the way, the R2030 drives are enroute from Australia. I believe I will have them in just a couple of days from now!
As Vladimir woud say: Cheers,
Tom Eldredge
Rutex LLC
Al: any way you can make a drawing of the layout you describe???
I'm dyslexic when it comes to 'word problems'. Heck , can't even read a vernier micrometer nor a slide rule. If it hadn't been for TI calculators, would never have gotten thru college.
Here is the method, power is to Encoder ONLY. Waveform diag. shows all three waveforms at once.
Al.
Hi friend.
Plz tell me ,how can oscilloscope shows waveform without moving motor?
You have to rotate the motor in order to generate the waveform, I use a motor to drive them at around 200rpm, not critical.
Al.
Thanks for the tip Al.
Al,
Say you don't have an oscilloscope. Is there a trick to find the start point of the U phase? Because I have a magnetic encoder and aligning the encoder is very simple by shorting two pins together when the rotor of the spindle is at its starting point. To my understanding the only thing I need to do is to get the rotor to the U phase starting point and short the encoder set-to-zero pins together so the encoder will be aligned to the motor.
By the way, I have a nice handheld oscilloscope but I never used it. I don't know how to use it. :(
Hi, is it possible to buy third party encoders with hall sensors or simulated hall sensors, I have never seen them advertised. The reason I ask is because I have a motley collection of AC servo motors with no matched drives and it occurred to me that putting such an encoder on these it should be possible to drive them with generic brushless DC servo's of which I have in abundance, just a thought. Dave
There are many encoders made this way now as Hall sensors have dropped out of favor now because the simulated hall tracks are much more accurate.
I used to get mine from Renco, but now they have been taken over by Heidenhain, many of the models have been dropped. But there are many others.
I have converted Fanuc AC servo motors to BLDC this way.
You need to know the pole pairs count of the motor, if you short the stator leads and rotate the motor by hand and count the 'bumps' per rev.
AZALIN, I have never come across a 'Magnetic' encoder as far as I recall.
Al..
By magnetic I mean the encoder has no rotating part, it just senses the rotation of a magnet.
This one: https://www.rls.si/en/rmc22-commutat...mental-encoder