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Reacher10

Servo motor with syncro and speed reducer

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I have a REX 607Z setup in a custom table (had my friend CNC the top) so I could hook it up to a servo motor with a Syncronizer. The servo motor is brushless and has four buttons on the control unit, Consew CSM-1001. The machine is working absolutely great with the servo motor and syncro...it took the machine to a higher plane.

 

Now this machine is very good for what it is however it will struggle power wise with the 550 watt motor, nothing major for the work I'm doing and nothing that bothers me...it is still light years better than the little motor it comes with.

I picked up a JUKI 55 with the table and a clutch motor in good condition for $125. With how well the REX responded with the servo motor it was a no brainer to use the same brushless setup on the JUKI.

Knowing that the 550 watt motor wouldn't have the same power as the clutch motor I bought pillow blocks and a shaft to make a speed reducer, I had a 2" and 6" pulley. My initial thinking was to use the 3:1 reducer with the clutch motor just to see if perhaps I could stick with the clutch motor if I indeed had better control.

Well trying to deal with that giant motor just flat out got on my nerves so I said screw this, I'll just get the brushless/syncro setup for it as it would be much easier to deal with and in the mean time put the reducer on the REX. It would give me some extra torque and I could get the reducer up and running and get any kinks worked out.

I did have to make a timing pulley for the brushless motor since the REX uses a timing belt. This was simple enough to do, I modeled up 30 tooth pulley for the motor and an adapter to increase the fly wheel to 5 inches...same deal as the power wheel sailrite sells.  I made these on my 3D printer and away I went. Since I had the 30 tooth modeled for the motor shaft I just had to change the model to fit  the 3/4" shaft for the reducer. Printed it out and boom, had me a nice reducer. It turns out I got it up and running in no time.

Here is where the problem came in. The syncro was no longer working as it should. I have read reports of the syncro not working when a speed reducer was installed as well as reports of the syncro setup working fine. My initial thinking was that it SHOULD work correctly, thinking that the needle would go where it's supposed to based on the syncro. The total reduction ended up to be 6:1 and the servo setup doesn't know or care how this is achieved, like a 1" pulley on the motor and a 6" flywheel pulley. ...right?...wrong!

I was perplexed by this. Well lets take a look at the numbers and I admit they are kind of all over the place. I put the original 70mm v-belt pulley back on the servo motor because the 6" pulley going on the reducer shaft was for a V-belt. The 30 tooth timing pulley I made for the reducer is 1 1/4" dia.

What I discovered is that even though from the motor to the flywheel is a 6:1 ratio there seems to be a direct correlation between the revolutions that the motor turns and where the revolution on the syncro is. So the motor is spinning a 2.75" (70mm) pulley and turning a 6" pulley, that is a 2.18:1 ratio. Then on top of that I'm going from a 1.25" pulley on the reducer shaft to a 5" flywheel pulley which is a 4:1 ratio.

So as I was about looking the positions of the drive pulley and the flywheel I realized the servo motor was turning a certain amount of degrees compared to how many degrees the syncro was reporting and they didn't add up! 

So if the needle position was simply based on the syncro postion then Bobs your uncle but because what the syncro reports and what motor reports don't jive, it ain't gonna work.

So I'm not sure it will work even if I get the drive pulley diameters in line. A 2" on the motor to a 6" on the reducer and then from a 2" on the reducer to a 6" on the flywheel. The motor would be reporting 2 times the amount of rpm's than the syncro is reporting it should have....who the hell knows? I think I'll model and print the pulleys and flywheel adapter to those diameters and see what happens. Lets face it with the hodge podge of diameters I'm using now, yeah, that would throw anything out of sync...lol. As a test I made an adapter for the syncro to go right on the 3/4" reducer shaft and it worked perfectly.

If anyone has any thoughts on this please feel free to chime in.

For those that report no problems, my guess is that relationship between motor and flywheel rpm's does not apply on there control units.

I'll post some pics of my reducer but right now it looks like 3 kids and dog had a wrestling match in there.

Here's an FYI. On my unit, if I set it up for needle down I can additionally press the back of the treadle and the needle will raise. However if I set it for needle up, when I release the treadle. that's it, needle up, no needle down option. So what I do is set the control unit for needle down but the needle is up and the syncro is set to report that it's in the needle down postion. When I release the treadle the needle goes to the up position but then if I want the needle down i just press on the back of the treadle....it works great.

Stay tuned...

BTW...first post...I've learned A LOT form this forum...THANKS!

IMG_20180119_103831256_HDR.jpg

IMG_20180119_103758543_HDR.jpg

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Can any servo motor be set up with  posistioner?

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@Reacher10 I've merged your 3 posts into one. Please don't hit the post button multiple times.  Let the server and internet catch up with you, give them a little time.  And make sure you are editing, not starting a new post over again.

Thanks, Tom

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@AdamPCain : No, the servo motor controller has to support the input from the needle position sensor.  Not all controllers have that feature.

@Reacher10 The needle positioning problem with speed reducers usually stems from the fact that most controllers have an internal programming rule that limits how many motor revolutions it will attempt to reach the desired needle position before it gives up. If the needle position sensor does not give the "we have arrived" signal before the maximum number of allowed motor revolutions is reached, an error condition will trigger. It's a safety feature to keep the motor from spinning uncontrolled forever when you let go of the pedal and the position sensor has failed. The motor controller basically thinks there is something wrong with the needle position sensor because it's not reporting back in time.  Exactly what that limit is depends on the controller software.

Edited by Uwe

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Wow - pulley printing is really cool!

I'm a big fan of the Rex 607 - easily the most bang for the buck in a new walking foot if a person doesn't mind adding a larger hand wheel of some sort and tinkering a little to work out the kinks.

I added the monster wheel, but a better use of money would have been a servo motor and adapting a generic xl clogged pulley.  Although the underpowered Rex doesn't get used much nowadays, it's a great machine to teach on so I'll never get rid of it.  

 

 

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I'm not sure how I posted 3 times...sorry about that. I figured a moderator would clean them out...thanks.

Uwe, thanks for the input I'm modeling a 120 tooth pulley for the flywheel and I'll put a 20 tooth on the motor making a 6:1 direct drive. If the firmware is designed as you say then this will show if this limit is reached. I'm actually at 6.18:1 with the mish mosh of diameters I'm using now.

If it does work I wouldn't even need the reducer since 6:1 should be just what I was looking for. However I could model the pulley's for 3:1 from the motor to the reducer and then again 3:1 form the reducer to the flywheel. So if the 6:1 direct works, it should work using the reducer.

If it doesn't work at 6:1 direct I could drop it to 5:1 and so on. I know 3.6:1 (20 tooth motor to 72 tooth flywheel) direct works because that is what I've had since I put the servo motor on.

I've been a mechanical designer for 25 years so I'm well versed in design, CNC, writing code and a crap load of other stuff. So the 3D printer is by far one of the coolest things I've owned. If your not accomplished with modeling, the problem becomes that you are relegated to models and STL files that you can find on the web or have it designed for you, my buddy has this problem. That's not to say that a person couldn't learn to model. There a a lot of modeling programs and tutorials out there, ya just gotta spend the time and stick to it.

However being able to fabricate prototypes and real world parts is Joe cool! I fly RC planes and even though now a days we don't need to build our own air frames, there is still stuff that we need to fabricate. So now with the printer, I'm going hog wild making stuff.

The problem I have with this big 120 tooth flywheel adapter is that diameter is right at the limits of how big of a model it can print...it's so damn close...we'll see.

in the mean time the servo motor for the JUKI came today. I'll put the reducer stuff on hold and get the motor hooked up and see how it goes.

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One solution - although you're already down this path - a motor with a synchro input and better low speed torque.

I have a Sailrite Fabricator with their "Workhorse" motor and I have to say it's got an insane amount of low speed torque and control for a supposed 550w motor. It totally crawls and I have not found anything it won't punch through (I get needle breakage first and the motor doesn't flinch)

It's essentially the exact same 12-coil motor as the Reliable Sewquiet 6000, which is available with a synchro.

The Workhorse has the positioner functions in the menu and a receptacle on the back for a synchro, (exactly like the Sewquiet) but they don't sell a synchro for it, as there is no way to attach it with their Posi-pin system. At least not one they've made available yet.

I just bought a new Juki 2810 and the dealer had a 750w motor with a synchro in stock, so I picked that one up and installed it. I should have went with the Workhorse or Reliable, the speed control is much better and the torque is comparable or better. I might get the Sewquiet later or swap out this Workhorse if I sell the Fabricator. (or I'll bite the bullet and get an Efka or something similar)

 

Here's the Sailrite vid with their Ultrafeed and the Workhorse in a retrofit table they sell.

(skip tot he end to see it working):

https://youtu.be/p0tSylFVJlc

 

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Oh and note to self:

GET A FRIKKIN 3D PRINTER ALREADY.

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I knew that the sensor and the posi pin deal wouldn't work so that's why I made an adapter. If you want the flywheel and sensor adapters I'd be happy to make them for you. If you do, just count how many teeth are on the power wheel and I'll make it the same size.

I am not sewing anything that's all that dense. I suspect that the JUKI will have more inherent torque in it's design compared to the REX so for the sewing I'm doing it shouldn't need a reducer.

The whole deal with the reducer was that I saw how simple it was to make one...and I like making things...perfect fit :). I know the servo motors run slow enough to have fine control of the needle position but it works so nice that for sure the NPS will supercede the reducer.

 

Yeah...get a 3D printer...I'm 58 now and the technology that was around when I was a kid compared to what we have now is nuts!

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The needle positioner that I bought with my servo worked fine - until I fitted a speed reducer pulley setup. It did not like it one bit! So I removed the positioner.

Fitting a small motor pulley and a (very) large pulley in place of the handwheel works great for slower speed and extra torque without messing around with pulleys and bearings and shafts.

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On 2/11/2018 at 9:45 PM, Uwe said:

 The needle positioning problem with speed reducers usually stems from the fact that most controllers have an internal programming rule that limits how many motor revolutions it will attempt to reach the desired needle position before it gives up. If the needle position sensor does not give the "we have arrived" signal before the maximum number of allowed motor revolutions is reached, an error condition will trigger. It's a safety feature to keep the motor from spinning uncontrolled forever when you let go of the pedal and the position sensor has failed. The motor controller basically thinks there is something wrong with the needle position sensor because it's not reporting back in time.  Exactly what that limit is depends on the controller software.

Uwe, great explanation.  This is my understanding as well.  When the sync takes too long to cycle we get an error message.  

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Uwe, it looks like you are correct. The needle positioning did not work above a 5:1 ratio on either direct drive or with the speed reducer. I didn't check it at 5:1 exactly but it's safe to say that below 5:1, it works.

The REX is setup at 4.8:1 direct drive and the JUKI is setup at 4.85:1 with the reducer and the NPS works perfectly on both.

It looks like 5:1 is the cutoff point for the NPS.

Hopefully this information will help others in the future.

Thanks

Rick

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Glad I read this post as I was just about to build and add a 3:1 reduction to one of my Sewquiet 6000 equipped machines and was not aware there might be issues with my needle positioner which I cant live without!

Great forum and love reading the various posts!

Gerald :rockon:

 

Edited by backyardcnc
fix typoos

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On 11/2/2018 at 8:20 PM, Reacher10 said:

I have a REX 607Z setup in a custom table (had my friend CNC the top) so I could hook it up to a servo motor with a Syncronizer. The servo motor is brushless and has four buttons on the control unit, Consew CSM-1001. The machine is working absolutely great with the servo motor and syncro...it took the machine to a higher plane.

 

Now this machine is very good for what it is however it will struggle power wise with the 550 watt motor, nothing major for the work I'm doing and nothing that bothers me...it is still light years better than the little motor it comes with.

I picked up a JUKI 55 with the table and a clutch motor in good condition for $125. With how well the REX responded with the servo motor it was a no brainer to use the same brushless setup on the JUKI.

Knowing that the 550 watt motor wouldn't have the same power as the clutch motor I bought pillow blocks and a shaft to make a speed reducer, I had a 2" and 6" pulley. My initial thinking was to use the 3:1 reducer with the clutch motor just to see if perhaps I could stick with the clutch motor if I indeed had better control.

Well trying to deal with that giant motor just flat out got on my nerves so I said screw this, I'll just get the brushless/syncro setup for it as it would be much easier to deal with and in the mean time put the reducer on the REX. It would give me some extra torque and I could get the reducer up and running and get any kinks worked out.

I did have to make a timing pulley for the brushless motor since the REX uses a timing belt. This was simple enough to do, I modeled up 30 tooth pulley for the motor and an adapter to increase the fly wheel to 5 inches...same deal as the power wheel sailrite sells.  I made these on my 3D printer and away I went. Since I had the 30 tooth modeled for the motor shaft I just had to change the model to fit  the 3/4" shaft for the reducer. Printed it out and boom, had me a nice reducer. It turns out I got it up and running in no time.

Here is where the problem came in. The syncro was no longer working as it should. I have read reports of the syncro not working when a speed reducer was installed as well as reports of the syncro setup working fine. My initial thinking was that it SHOULD work correctly, thinking that the needle would go where it's supposed to based on the syncro. The total reduction ended up to be 6:1 and the servo setup doesn't know or care how this is achieved, like a 1" pulley on the motor and a 6" flywheel pulley. ...right?...wrong!

I was perplexed by this. Well lets take a look at the numbers and I admit they are kind of all over the place. I put the original 70mm v-belt pulley back on the servo motor because the 6" pulley going on the reducer shaft was for a V-belt. The 30 tooth timing pulley I made for the reducer is 1 1/4" dia.

What I discovered is that even though from the motor to the flywheel is a 6:1 ratio there seems to be a direct correlation between the revolutions that the motor turns and where the revolution on the syncro is. So the motor is spinning a 2.75" (70mm) pulley and turning a 6" pulley, that is a 2.18:1 ratio. Then on top of that I'm going from a 1.25" pulley on the reducer shaft to a 5" flywheel pulley which is a 4:1 ratio.

So as I was about looking the positions of the drive pulley and the flywheel I realized the servo motor was turning a certain amount of degrees compared to how many degrees the syncro was reporting and they didn't add up! 

So if the needle position was simply based on the syncro postion then Bobs your uncle but because what the syncro reports and what motor reports don't jive, it ain't gonna work.

So I'm not sure it will work even if I get the drive pulley diameters in line. A 2" on the motor to a 6" on the reducer and then from a 2" on the reducer to a 6" on the flywheel. The motor would be reporting 2 times the amount of rpm's than the syncro is reporting it should have....who the hell knows? I think I'll model and print the pulleys and flywheel adapter to those diameters and see what happens. Lets face it with the hodge podge of diameters I'm using now, yeah, that would throw anything out of sync...lol. As a test I made an adapter for the syncro to go right on the 3/4" reducer shaft and it worked perfectly.

If anyone has any thoughts on this please feel free to chime in.

For those that report no problems, my guess is that relationship between motor and flywheel rpm's does not apply on there control units.

I'll post some pics of my reducer but right now it looks like 3 kids and dog had a wrestling match in there.

Here's an FYI. On my unit, if I set it up for needle down I can additionally press the back of the treadle and the needle will raise. However if I set it for needle up, when I release the treadle. that's it, needle up, no needle down option. So what I do is set the control unit for needle down but the needle is up and the syncro is set to report that it's in the needle down postion. When I release the treadle the needle goes to the up position but then if I want the needle down i just press on the back of the treadle....it works great.

Stay tuned...

BTW...first post...I've learned A LOT form this forum...THANKS!

IMG_20180119_103831256_HDR.jpg

IMG_20180119_103758543_HDR.jpg

Great work, can you share the files for 3D printing?

 

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Whoa... didn't see your post..... What format, dwg, stl, dxf or all 3. It will be the flywheel and the drive pully for 1/5 pitch timing belt and needle positioner hub.

Edited by Reacher10

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Thanks a ton @Reacher10    I was thinking about making an adapter like this to slow down the flywheel, rather than invest in a monster wheel.

Looks like it's the "rex_flywheel.stl" for the 5" cog upgrade? 

What belt would we buy to use this adapter on the Rex, w/o changing the smaller cog?

P.S. I'm wanting to try my hand at recovering a bunch leather parts in my old car. A just few places for contrast stitching so I'd get the Rex pass it on, so keeping the investment low on Rex vs. finding a used leather machine for short use. :)

 

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Another grateful Rex owner.  This saved me a bunch of time!  I have a 3D printer, but even if someone doesn't own one, there are a ton of online places (Shapeways, Protolabs, Rapidmade, etc) where you can send the stl files for printing and your parts will come in the mail.  At some of these online places, you can even have them 3D printed out of metal, but that is unnecessary for this application.  If others are reading this, I discovered that you can't download the files unless you join the forum.  Thanks @Reacher10

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On 5/1/2020 at 7:19 AM, hansknec said:

Another grateful Rex owner.  This saved me a bunch of time!  I have a 3D printer, but even if someone doesn't own one, there are a ton of online places (Shapeways, Protolabs, Rapidmade, etc) where you can send the stl files for printing and your parts will come in the mail.  At some of these online places, you can even have them 3D printed out of metal, but that is unnecessary for this application.  If others are reading this, I discovered that you can't download the files unless you join the forum.  Thanks @Reacher10

Great information!  
 

The Rex and sailrite machines definitely benefit from extra reduction - I have a monster wheel, but it was expensive for what it is.

For those new to the cogged belts that these machines use - they are called XL timing belts and are not anything unique to sailrite, Rex or any of the other clones.   

 

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My Rex has not arrived yet, but I am not wasting time waiting..  I designed an even smaller drive gear that fits my servomotor.  This is a 16 tooth XL gear, so it will have even more reduction than the 30 tooth that @Reacher10 installed.  The hope is with the 16 tooth, and a minimum rpm of 100 on my servo, it will be slow enough and have enough torque to not have to change to a monster wheel or the 3d printed larger XL gear.  My servo is the 600 watt one sold as a generic non-brand on ebay for $80 without a synchro. Shaft with key is 15mm (.6")  I don't sew often enough to need the synchro.  One note if you are printing your own or if you are having one printed you need to specify "wall thickness" in the slicer to be a huge number (10) on this print so it becomes a solid with no infill.  Here is the Solidworks part file and the STL file for the smaller pinion drive.  I don't know how long a PLA printed gear will last, but I'm willing to try since it only costs pennies to print.

TimePhoto_20200504_132411.jpg

16 tooth.STL

16 tooth.SLDPRT

photo.jpg

Edited by hansknec

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I'm interested to see how it works out and how long it holds up. Simple enough to print a couple more and keep a spare handy.

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Hi Folks,

Newbie here.

I have a Rex bought primarily for canvas work , but I want to recover a nice old leather chair.  I struggled with it initially.  I put the large plastic wheel from Sailrite and it worked much better, but still needed a lot of finesse to start and stitch slowly.

I found  a used Consew with servo and syncro and I snagged it up. Works much better than I could ever get the Rex to sew. The Rex went under the workbench.

The Consew came with the original factory OEM servo motor.  I'd like to mount that to the Rex so I can do Zig-zag stitching.

I'd like to use the timing belt on the Rex upgrade. The OEM belts say XL - I assume they are metric, 5mm pitch. I am a bit confused because Sailrite sells pulley/belts that are 1/5" pitch. Can someone please verify that the pitch on the OEM belts on the Rex are 5mm XL?

So now I need a pulley for the retrofit servo to work with the large plastic Sailrite pulley. The servo has a 15mm shaft and a key slot. I haven't been able to find one on-line. Would any of you folks with 3-D printers be willing to print a couple and sell them to me? I'm not sure the number of teeth, so I'd like to try a few sizes from 16 - 30 teeth, or?

 

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Sailrite should have a cogged pulley that will work - they use it on the industrial servo in their catalog.  At least as of a few years ago the cogged servo drive pulley was available separately.

The XL timing belts are all 1/5” in pitch, but do vary in width.   There are 1/4” wide, 5/16”, and 3/8”.   You will also see metric sizes, but they are the same belts, just listed in metric widths. You’ll be ordering the belt based on the number of teeth, the width and also what it’s made from - specialty belt suppliers will have half a dozen different constructions, but most sold on eBay or Amazon are ordinary black rubber.

 

Edited by Wizcrafts
Corrected spelling of "cogged"

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On 11/16/2018 at 9:57 AM, Reacher10 said:

Newbie here from NZ. Downloaded and printed rex flywheel to slow down sailrite clone. New to sewing so need speed down to baby steps till I get the hang of it. Unfortunately was expecting about a 5.0 inch wheel but ended up with a 6.125. Not the same as blue wheels on the Rex machine. Photo included of modified ali pulley but still not slow enough 

Is there an stl. file available for the 5.0 wheel?

Cheers Steve

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