Members nejcek74 Posted 16 hours ago Members Report Posted 16 hours ago of course they have, this is from Efka site: which shows that torque is more or less flat in the lower part of the rpm. It also shows that they have two different servos, one built for speed and the other built for torque. The power is function of speed and torque: P [kW] = (T [Nm] · ω [rad/s]) / 1000 in lower speeds where torque curve is flat the power is increasing constantly with speed. Later it can decrease slightly (depends on the turning curve of torque). Of course when the speed is 0, power is also 0. And because of engineering reasons the motors have minimum speed at which they work. Quote
AlZilla Posted 14 hours ago Author Report Posted 14 hours ago Those are very informative charts. I'd really like to see the same data on lower end servos. Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
AlZilla Posted 14 hours ago Author Report Posted 14 hours ago 3 hours ago, friquant said: Everything I read about digital servos says they have high torque from a standstill Oddly, most everything I've seen about the cheaper servos is that they lack torque in the low end. I don't know ... Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
Members friquant Posted 13 hours ago Members Report Posted 13 hours ago 19 minutes ago, AlZilla said: Oddly, most everything I've seen about the cheaper servos is that they lack torque in the low end. I don't know ... I've started to distinguish between digital servo motors and universal motors with triac speed controllers. Unfortunately, both are marketed as "servo motors". Quote In search of the perfect hundred-dollar servo motor with needle positioner. friquant. Pronounced "FREE-kwuhnt"
Members nejcek74 Posted 13 hours ago Members Report Posted 13 hours ago I guess the problem is with the minimum speed to start. Which is I guess an engineering characteristic of the motor, but this is beyond my limited knowledge of electric motors Regarding torque of different types of motor I found this: Quote
AlZilla Posted 11 hours ago Author Report Posted 11 hours ago 2 hours ago, friquant said: I've started to distinguish between digital servo motors and universal motors with triac speed controllers. Unfortunately, both are marketed as "servo motors". And maybe there's a distinction between brushed and brushless. Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
AlZilla Posted 10 hours ago Author Report Posted 10 hours ago 1 hour ago, nejcek74 said: guess the problem is with the minimum speed to start. Which is I guess an engineering characteristic of the motor, but this is beyond my limited knowledge of electric I'm wondering if the minimum speed issue is to decrease heat. I've read that 300 is where heat dissipation is adequate (maybe for sustained operation?). Possibly 200 is banking on the user not staying at 200 for longer periods? I've also noticed that some of these cheaper motors have actual cooling fins on the outside of the body, where others just have undulations cast into them. My current motor with a 100 rpm minimum start speed has the cooling fins on the case. I'll have to start noticing if there's any correlation. Also, based on my recent disassembly of a cheap servo, the fan built into the end is just flat paddles running next to the closed end of the motor. No circulation at all. I think a small computer type fan blowing on the motor housing would really up the cooling game. It's on my to do list, even though with my low volume of sewing, I don't think heat is going to be an issue. Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
Members friquant Posted 9 hours ago Members Report Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, AlZilla said: And maybe there's a distinction between brushed and brushless. Universal motors are all brushed. My universal motor came with extra brushes even. About half the digital servo motors I see advertise as being brushless---the others don't say. I took the motor apart today on my "stitchman" digital servo and verified that it has no brushes. If anybody has a digital servo with actual brushes inside, I'd be interested to hear. Quote In search of the perfect hundred-dollar servo motor with needle positioner. friquant. Pronounced "FREE-kwuhnt"
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.