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abt stepper motor

a stepper motor is microstepped. when pulsed, the shaft moves by a
small step and then returns to its original position, ultimately
producing no revolution at all. this happens for the entire duration of
the pulse.
what could the reason be ?
 
Microstepping requires current to be applied continuously to both
phases. If current is removed, the motor will return to the nearest
pole because of its internal magnetism. If you are using PWM to
generate the microstepping currents, you may have selected too low a
frequency.

Can you give us more details?
 
L

Lynn Coffelt

Jan 1, 1970
0
Microstepping requires current to be applied continuously to both
phases. If current is removed, the motor will return to the nearest
pole because of its internal magnetism. If you are using PWM to
generate the microstepping currents, you may have selected too low a
frequency.

Can you give us more details?
Or, if it had been operating correctly, perhaps one of the driver
transistors (MOSFET's or whatever) has become shorted?
 
firstly,thanks for your response.i am not using pulse width modulation
for generating micro-stepping currents(that option in my drive stands
disabled...after your mail i tried enabling it and tried to run my
motor at maximum frequency of 40khz all the way down to 1.25khz...there
was no difference.same old story).could you think of any other
solutions to this problem.for ur info my stepper motor is of 0.16 amp
peak,5volt 1kg torque,1.8degree step angle,30mm diameter rating.
also another motor of 0.65 amp peak,24volt,1.8degree
step angle,80mm dia worked fine with the same drive(ofcourse with
different current settings).help me out on this please
 
I dunno.. you've kind of exhausted my repertoire of stepping motor
knowledge.

Is it perhaps a five-wire motor? If the two windings are tied together
at a center tap then your controller might be getting confused. Such a
motor would work if you only drive one winding, but when you drive
both, you'll be bypassing some windings.
 
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