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[email protected] January 31st 13 05:20 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric

[email protected] January 31st 13 05:27 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Thursday, January 31, 2013 12:20:28 PM UTC-5, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.

I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some

operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't

cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of

electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any

motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.

Eric


How much space do you have, and how often will it be locked and unlocked?

What is the rotational range of motion required?

Lots of choices, much fewer depending on the constraints.

A dirt cheap/simple brake would be a few interleaved plates, alternating between turning with one side or the other, and a clamp (solenoid? screw clamp with gear motor?) clamping the stack together. Would impart no motion, and could be in the clamped state with no power applied.

Ned Simmons January 31st 13 05:49 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 09:20:28 -0800, wrote:

I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric


I've had several occasions to put brakes on servos, and a couple where
it was important not to disturb the position. It's not as easy as it
sounds, depending on what "any" in "must not cause any
motion of the axis" means. The fussiest one I did involved locking a
table on a direct drive servo on a machine to dril tiny radial holes
in a part. It took a couple tries to get the disturbance under a few
tenths. The final design was a disc brake with the pads mounted on
flexures (flexure = zero free play) and actuated by an air cylinder.

--
Ned Simmons

[email protected] January 31st 13 07:47 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Jan 31, 12:20*pm, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric


I have never made one. But looked at Herbach and Rademan and saw they
have clutches from Deltran and Mitsubishi. Doubt if they are robust
enough, but googled Deltran and found that Danaher offers a guide to
Deltran clutches and Brakes. So you might look at Herback and Rademan
and get some part numbers . And then look at the guide to Clutches and
Brakes.

I always look at what is available and see how they did it before
designing my own.


Dan

Pete C. January 31st 13 07:52 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 

wrote:

I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric


Back when I worked on CNC machines, the axis locks for 4th (or whatever)
axes were normally air or air/over hydraulic actuated when there were
space constraints.

[email protected] January 31st 13 08:32 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 12:49:48 -0500, Ned Simmons
wrote:

On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 09:20:28 -0800, wrote:

I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric


I've had several occasions to put brakes on servos, and a couple where
it was important not to disturb the position. It's not as easy as it
sounds, depending on what "any" in "must not cause any
motion of the axis" means. The fussiest one I did involved locking a
table on a direct drive servo on a machine to dril tiny radial holes
in a part. It took a couple tries to get the disturbance under a few
tenths. The final design was a disc brake with the pads mounted on
flexures (flexure = zero free play) and actuated by an air cylinder.

I have been thinking about the pads mounted on flexures but then
started to think about magnetics since I already will have power going
to the 5th axis servo.
Eric

Paul Drahn January 31st 13 09:49 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On 1/31/2013 9:20 AM, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric

You might investigate the magnetic clutch on an automobile air
conditioning pump. That has bearings, and a really strong 12 volt
electromagnet. A good start for you, anyway.

Paul

[email protected] January 31st 13 10:14 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 09:20:28 -0800, wrote:

I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric

A wheel chair motor.

Bob Engelhardt January 31st 13 10:23 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On 1/31/2013 3:32 PM, wrote:
I have been thinking about the pads mounted on flexures but then
started to think about magnetics since I already will have power going
to the 5th axis servo.
Eric


You could have both: pads on flexures that were actuated by
electromagnets mounted on the pads, behind them. Could be quite tight,
depending upon the thicknesses & materials of the pads & disk.

Bob


Bob La Londe[_7_] February 1st 13 01:28 AM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
wrote in message
...
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric



I don't know what would be best either, but would a pneumatic disc brake
work if it could be engaged slowly so as to not over power the servo?





Larry Jaques[_4_] February 1st 13 01:41 AM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 13:49:03 -0800, Paul Drahn
wrote:

On 1/31/2013 9:20 AM, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.
Eric

You might investigate the magnetic clutch on an automobile air
conditioning pump. That has bearings, and a really strong 12 volt
electromagnet. A good start for you, anyway.


THOSE I'm familiar with. The action might cause a rotational hit since
the clutches are usually on spring-steel strips. But they're strong
once engaged.

I was thinking disc brake style, too. The disc would be mounted to
the lead screw (if there is one) and opposing solenoids would grab it
from either side.

Eric, if added mass wouldn't be a problem, might you increase the
servo size, resulting in a higher holding capacity and bypassing the
need for a brake?

--
I’ve long been passionate about protecting and expanding democracy,
which is really the only viable mechanism to preserve liberty and
distribute power from kings to the rest of us.
--George Farah

DoN. Nichols[_2_] February 1st 13 05:27 AM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On 2013-01-31, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.


DC servos? What amount of motion can you tolerate. I would
expect with steady/slowly-changing loads no more than one or two encoder
steps of motion before it was forced to be right again. (Not sure
where your encoder is relative to the motor, but if you don't have
enough backlash between the axis and the motor for brake to do it, I
would not worry about the ability of the encoder/servo pair to hold
position.

Now -- if there are serious pulse loads, then you might have a
little more error before the servo loop could fix it.

Note that at least some DC servos and AC servos as well have
built-in brakes which the controller has to power to release prior to
motion.

Good Luck,
DoN.

--
Remove oil spill source from e-mail
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. |
http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---

[email protected] February 1st 13 04:38 PM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On 1 Feb 2013 05:27:47 GMT, "DoN. Nichols"
wrote:

On 2013-01-31, wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some
operations. I have looked at magnetic particle brakes and they ain't
cheap. So I'm thinking about making one. Or some type of
electromagnetic brake. The brake, when actuated, must not cause any
motion of the axis, and I'm just not sure what would work best.


DC servos? What amount of motion can you tolerate. I would
expect with steady/slowly-changing loads no more than one or two encoder
steps of motion before it was forced to be right again. (Not sure
where your encoder is relative to the motor, but if you don't have
enough backlash between the axis and the motor for brake to do it, I
would not worry about the ability of the encoder/servo pair to hold
position.

Now -- if there are serious pulse loads, then you might have a
little more error before the servo loop could fix it.

Note that at least some DC servos and AC servos as well have
built-in brakes which the controller has to power to release prior to
motion.

Good Luck,
DoN.

Grewetings DoN,
There will be pulsed loads. Such as when an end mill is spotfacing
and/or counterboring a curved surface. I don't know yet if I will be
contour milling with the 5th axis. Probably not at first. I just need
to be able index the parts. To do this I will be using an M code to
send a signal to an Arduino. The Arduino will then command the 5th
axis to move. I'm still learning how to use the Arduino and the LCD
touchscreen display I bought for the Arduino. I still need to figure
out how to get the signals from the encoder to the servo amp. I don't
know yet if slip rings will do or if I need to get some type of
wireless setup. But I need to approach this project with what I do
best first, and that's mechanical stuff. I think I have the drive
figured out, now I need the brake.
Eric

DoN. Nichols[_2_] February 2nd 13 05:44 AM

Anybody here make a magnetic brake?
 
On 2013-02-01, wrote:
On 1 Feb 2013 05:27:47 GMT, "DoN. Nichols"
wrote:

On 2013-01-31,
wrote:
I am working on a 5th axis for the mill. I think it will need a brake.
I'm not sure if the servo motor will be able to hold position for some


[ ... ]

DC servos? What amount of motion can you tolerate. I would
expect with steady/slowly-changing loads no more than one or two encoder


[ ... ]

Now -- if there are serious pulse loads, then you might have a
little more error before the servo loop could fix it.


[ ... ]

Grewetings DoN,


There will be pulsed loads. Such as when an end mill is spotfacing
and/or counterboring a curved surface. I don't know yet if I will be
contour milling with the 5th axis. Probably not at first. I just need
to be able index the parts. To do this I will be using an M code to
send a signal to an Arduino. The Arduino will then command the 5th
axis to move. I'm still learning how to use the Arduino and the LCD
touchscreen display I bought for the Arduino. I still need to figure
out how to get the signals from the encoder to the servo amp.


The part of the encoder which requires connections should not be
moving relative to the motor -- so cables to the motor and cables to the
encoder could be strapped together -- but shield the encoder cables to
avoid noise from the motor from introducing errors.

The encoder (on a motor, at least) is typically a slotted disc
(or a glass/quartz disc with slots printed on it by evaporation of
metal). This is mounted to the back end of the motor shaft. Bolted to
the back of the motor housing is a set of LEDs and photodetectors (along
with matching slots in a stationary part). Wires go from these to the
Arduino or whatever you use.

I don't
know yet if slip rings will do or if I need to get some type of
wireless setup.


Just plain cables for the encoder connections.

Now -- if you want the brake which started this, you typically
have a brake disc on the shaft, with a spring mounting (not much give)
and an electromagnet mounted tot he motor to attract the disc to contact
a friction surface.

But I need to approach this project with what I do
best first, and that's mechanical stuff. I think I have the drive
figured out, now I need the brake.


Adding both encoders and a brake to the back end of the motor
will be a bit tricky. An alternate encoder is one to directly measure
the motion of whatever -- I'm assuming a rotary table or something
similar -- and measuring at the table instead of the motor means that
you don't have as much resolution for the same encoder. For linear
motion, there are linear encoders which mount to the moving part, with a
reading head bolted to the stationary part -- well sort of stationary,
such as the head bolted to the saddle of a mill, and the encoder bar
(which has no wires) bolted to the edge of the table so the table pulls
the bar past the reading head.

Good Luck,
DoN.

--
Remove oil spill source from e-mail
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. |
http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---


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