Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Blown Gecko 340
Posted by
Jon Elson
on 2003-06-15 22:28:23 UTC
andyolney wrote:
If the connections were failing during movement, it might cause a transistor
to pop in the Gecko.
voltage, such as a single D cell, and looking for a jerk in the rotation
or a
current spike as shown on a DVM in current mode.
Sometimes these motor defects can be intermittent, too. Is this blown drive
attached to the same motor as when you last blew one? That might be
a strong clue that it is related to the motor, wiring, or something
particular
to that axis. What did you have the current limit set to?
What is your DC supply voltage? With high inductance motors, it is possible
for current to flow back from the motor, through the drive, and increase the
voltage on the DC supply. If the voltage goes high enough, the drive will
pop.
Do you have the recommended capacitors across the DC power input
terminals (or is that for the stepper drves only?)
Jon
>I have damaged one of my G340( terminals 2-3 show 1 ohm resistance)Highly improbable. One possibility is bad connections to the motor.
>and I don't know why. This is the 2nd one and after Mariss was kind
>enough to repair the first, I redid the wiring completely per the
>schematic Tim Goldstein posted.
>
>What is puzzling me is the fact that I had 2 G340s working fine, was
>jogging fine, set the speed and acceleration using Mach2, ran some
>test gcode rectangles, and had a couple of hours of run time. Yea!
>
>Yesterday went to make a first part, ran the program, moves fine,
>wrong zero, stop, try to jog to part zero and the g340 won't come out
>of reset. Check resistance of mosfets and trm 2-3 is 1 ohm.
>
>I am looking for reasons for the failure. So far:
>
>Wiring error?
>Wiring is the same as the working axis and I did not touch alter it
>to my knowlege.
>
>
If the connections were failing during movement, it might cause a transistor
to pop in the Gecko.
>Bad Motor?Yes, it is possible, too. You can check the motor by applying a very low
>I have seen a discussion of bad/shorted windings on steppers causing
>damage, could this apply?
>
>
voltage, such as a single D cell, and looking for a jerk in the rotation
or a
current spike as shown on a DVM in current mode.
Sometimes these motor defects can be intermittent, too. Is this blown drive
attached to the same motor as when you last blew one? That might be
a strong clue that it is related to the motor, wiring, or something
particular
to that axis. What did you have the current limit set to?
What is your DC supply voltage? With high inductance motors, it is possible
for current to flow back from the motor, through the drive, and increase the
voltage on the DC supply. If the voltage goes high enough, the drive will
pop.
Do you have the recommended capacitors across the DC power input
terminals (or is that for the stepper drves only?)
Jon
Discussion Thread
andyolney
2003-06-15 21:16:06 UTC
Blown Gecko 340
JanRwl@A...
2003-06-15 22:19:08 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Blown Gecko 340
Jon Elson
2003-06-15 22:28:23 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Blown Gecko 340
andyolney
2003-06-16 09:10:18 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340
Jon Elson
2003-06-16 10:34:52 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Re: Blown Gecko 340
andyolney
2003-06-16 21:19:55 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340
andyolney
2003-06-17 22:53:03 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340
Lee Studley
2003-06-18 10:17:32 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340
Jon Elson
2003-06-18 10:50:50 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Re: Blown Gecko 340
andyolney
2003-06-22 15:34:39 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340 Update
Jon Elson
2003-06-27 20:26:02 UTC
Re: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] Re: Blown Gecko 340 Update
andyolney
2003-06-27 22:04:43 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340 Update
Lee Studley
2003-06-27 23:35:05 UTC
Re: Blown Gecko 340 Update
Dan Mauch
2003-07-14 10:51:50 UTC
Interesting problem
Fred Smith
2003-07-14 15:18:27 UTC
Re: Interesting problem
stevenson_engineers
2003-07-14 17:31:43 UTC
Re: Interesting problem