Spread the love





12

17













102 Shares

Stepper motors are used in various types of equipment for accurate rotation angle and speed control using pulse signals. Stepper motors generate high torque with a compact body, and are ideal for quick acceleration and response. Stepper motors also hold their position at stop, due to their mechanical design. Stepper motor solutions consist of a driver (takes pulse signals in and converts them to motor motion) and a stepper motor.



When you start to create a CNC or something similar you need a stepper motor, probably you can find they inside your trash.

If you have and old printer or better a laser printer, probably you can get 2 Nema17 motor. I specify old because newest one use a brushless motor with feedback.

But the real problem when you decide to reuse stepepr, is the identification of the coil.

To use It the best solution is to use a driver, the most common one is A4988, but existing various models.





You can buy here

4 wires stepper motors

The most common motors is 4 wires (bipolar) and 6 wires motors.

4 wires stepper motor resistance

To use this motor you must identify the coil, take your tester and start check de restitance of all coils.

As you can clearly see from the images and the video for the bipolar motors it is simply necessary to find the connected ones, in practice the pairs will be formed by the wires that have a resistance differente from 0.

6 wires stepper motors

This type of motor is more complex to use, but with tester and some patience you can find the 4 wires you need to connect.

6 wires stepper motor resistance

As you can see in this case the pairs of wires that must be taken are those that have a greater resistance, ie those more external to the coils.

When you don’t have the specifications

Normally the motors that you find inside the printers are not easily traceable, consequently you are without specifications.

Given that the circular stepper motors (not nema17) usually have 75 steps and not 200 like the classic nema17 (there is also the 400 variant), the real problem is how much voltage and current give to the motors.

Amperage drivers

There is a simple “trick/way” to set correct amperage, you must put tester + on potentiometer and tester – to GND of the driver (look the image) then:

DRV8825: Imax = 2 * Vref (if Imax = 1.5A, then Vref is to be set to 1.5/2 V = 0.75V)

A4988: Imax = 2,5 * Vref

In my situation I put 0,8v*2,5 = 2A even if the step amp phase is 1,7amp but I need more power.

Step to follow to set the right input

I recommend following the following steps:

Trivially test the outputs of the power supply to determine the rating.

If you can’t do this, follow the steps below:

Start with 12v and set the maximum amperage per phase on the driver (for the A4988 2A) : the low voltage affects the speed of rotation and naturally forces you to a greater amperage with a consequent increase in temperature. The motors you extract usually have 24-36v but they also work at 12v.

: the low voltage affects the speed of rotation and naturally forces you to a greater amperage with a consequent increase in temperature. The motors you extract usually have 24-36v but they also work at 12v. If the temperature as we expect it becomes too high, decrease the amperage to obtain a high but acceptable temperature.

to obtain a high but acceptable temperature. If you get a very high temperature, increase the voltage and repeat the steps above.

Test the motors

I create a silly program to check the motor, normally I connect they on CNC Shield, but if you don’t have It you can directly connect to a driver.

I also use that program to calculate the exact number of steps / mm when setting the parameters of my CNCs.

Some Arduino have problem when you doing a long running transmission with grbl firmware, pay attention.

You can buy here

CNC shield Nema 17 connections

You can buy here

Stepper motor X Axis connection

You can get the code from my github, here you can find repository.

Thanks

This article is an integration for the series of Cyclon PCB Factory, take a look.