Looked....it is enabled
Do you find using pwm that the frequency fluctuates when in use?
If I select s12000 to get 200hz/12000rpm
The vfd reads 195 - 205...ish
I don't recall this happens using the external pot.
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Its important that you try and keep your analog signal wiring away from the main power cables. You can cross them if need be but dont let them run parallel to each other. Your drive manual should give you info on this aspect too....most screened cables would be fine....
I know its a lot but you should try and go through your drive manual cause it gives very good information on mounting, protection, wiring etc. of your drive. Personally i go through the manual before i even decide to buy a drive. They will guide you re the earthing of the screen too.
"3.1.3 EMC-Correct InstallationFollowing these guidelines is advised, where compliance with EN 61000-6-3/4, EN 55011 or EN 61800-3 First environment is required. If the installationis in EN 61800-3 Second environment, then it is acceptable to deviate from these guidelines. It is however not recommended.Good engineering practice to ensure EMC-correct electrical installation:• Use only braided screened/armoured motor cables and control cables.The screen should provide a minimum coverage of 80%.The screen material must be metal, not limited to but typically copper, aluminium, steelor lead. There are no special requirements for the mains cable.• Installations using rigid metal conduits are not required to use screened cable, but the motor cable must be installed in conduit separate fromthe control and mains cables. Full connection of the conduit from the drive to the motor is required. The EMC performance of flexible conduitsvaries a lot and information from the manufacturer must be obtained.• Connect the screen/armour/conduit to earth at both ends for motor cables and control cables.• Avoid terminating the screen/armour with twisted ends (pigtails). Such a termination increases the high frequency impedance of the screen,which reduces its effectiveness at high frequencies. Use low impedance cable clamps or glands instead.• Ensure good electrical contact between the de-coupling plate and the metal chassis of the frequency converter, see Instruction MI.02.BX.YY.• Avoid using unscreened/unarmoured motor or control cables inside cabinets housing the drive(s), where possible."
From the manual
Definitely a pulse type fluctuation using the Bob. Rewired the external pot and turned off the spindle and it is much more stable. Will order some cy cable today.
Will try cutting something too.
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I am just running mine on a table.....no analog and mains cables close to each other. With my new design i purposely tried to separate the mains stuff from the controls.
Your VFD will generate a lot of "noise".....your switching power supplies too
Will this be your first cutting on the machine?
A few years back at my old job we had a sealing machines that was controlled by a plc....we had endless issues with them, also no software to allow us to edit the program. The company did not want to spend money on them cause they planned to send them to China sometime. Meantime they caused me lots of hassles on shift. Anyway it had a VFD, few solenoids heating controllers etc. Since i design microcontroller based stuff i decided to build a dedicated controller for the machines. It work very well however due to the massive amount of "noise" generated by the drive and solenoids my micro would reset from time to time causing problems. Lets just say i spent more than 80 hours redesigning the pcb design and layout. Sorted it at the end without any filtering on the mains. What i found was that most of the noise was coming through the mains power....this noise came mainly from all the switching solenoids, VFD and switch mode power supplies. So good earthing, separation of circuits and filtering is a good idea. Don't be fooled by these bob's saying that they isolated the inputs and outputs....that is good but you can still get issues through the mains and power supplies back to your pc.....
That sounds like a nightmare situation. They're lucky having someone with your experience that's able to troubleshoot to that depth!
I've owned it for about 6 months. Cut quite a few bits so hopefully it will go well. These latest issues came from my Chinese vfd erroring on boot up. I replaced it with this one....it was supposed to have been set-up before it was dispatched to me.....you know the rest. Jokers!
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