Servo Drive for Lathe Spindle

barnbwt

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Anyone having luck using a servo-driven C-axis spindle to turn *and* mill stuff?

I am trying to determine my best options for an upcoming CNC lathe project. As is always the case, the goal is a machine that 'does eveything' but compromises for the resources available. Threading at the very least is a necessity, since this project needs to deliver more functionality than my manual lathe to be worthwhile.

The requirements thus far:
- 110VAC/15A-1ph wall power source
- 1.0-1.5hp spindle power (so I still have enough reserve juice for the axis steppers & controller)
- 4000 spindle speed, belted to motor (fast enough for proper carbide sfm on 1"-2" aluminum parts)
- Articulating spindle (single point threading, live-tool engraving, live-tool light milling/slotting/broaching, possibly rigid tapping if motor is strong enough)
-widget-sized parts in small quantities (so no need for very long duty cycles or aggressive cutting)

Points 3 and 4 seem to suggest a servo, so I am following that rabbit hole at this time.

The questions thus far:
-If using the servo as a controllable C-axis for engraving or light milling (1/8" shank or smaller), will the servo's resistance & mass be sufficient to control tool chatter & cutting forces? These are 4N-m range.
-Is it more efficient to run a high-speed stepped-up-high-voltage servo geared down to the desired RPM, or gearing up a low-speed high-torque servo that operates at near line voltage?
-Most drivers run on Asian/industrial 220-240VAC sources; are there any downsides to using a driver that operates closer to my line voltage?
-Is there any advantage to high vs. low voltage AC brushless servos, or is it really just a function of which controller you want to use?
-Any estimate of losses for transformer or switching voltage booster systems would be helpful to determine my final current draw.
-At what region of the operation envelope do servos+controllers draw the most source current? Is it whenever they are applying max torque, or rather when they are running at high speeds under maximum voltage?
-Could I feasibly use a larger motor and limit its current through the driver software, and would I be giving up torque or speed (or both)?

Anyone having luck using a servo-driven C-axis spindle to turn *and* mill stuff?
 
The limiting factor is your input power. If there is a way you can get 240 volts at 15 amps your options increase dramatically.
Take a look at these motors http://www.dmm-tech.com/ac_servomotor_main_a1.html

Normally you get better performance from the higher voltage servos. The torque curves are better on the high voltage servos and normally are capable of higher RPM.

Adding in the mass of the chuck & spindle should be adequate to control chatter. Running the motor at a higher RPM and gearing it down would be some advantage.

Max current draw is normally at max torque.

Transformer losses are negligible.

There is no reason that a servo C axis won't work. It just requires enough power to run it. All modern horizontal machining centers have servos on the spindle.

Looking forward to seeing your build.:encourage:
 
Yeah, a proper 30A connection (or full 240V connection) is not in the cards at this time; residential standard outlet is the only option in my garage --why do you think I asked the question here vs. CNCzone or Practical Machinist, lol? ;) Now, I'm not opposed to 'growth' potential, as far as leaving some additional capacity that a better power connection could realize at a later date (i.e. limiting driver current draw by holding voltage/speed below maximum levels)

I fully expect to have some trade-offs relating to input power limitations, same as with my 2hp 12x28 manual lathe; I'm just hoping to get my surface speeds up fast enough to get more optimum cut quality with shallower passes made convenient by the CAM automation. This machine will be far more rigid than my manual lathe with its gimpy gib contact surfaces, so I think it's doable (well, assuming it doesn't ring like a bell in practice, which is entirely possible since I'm not bedding this in epoxy granite or cladding it in cast iron)

I've been looking into the Baldor offerings since there seem to be a lot of 110VAC driver options in the kW class I'm interested in, and also used motors this side of the oceans. The one thing that seems off is their motors are rated to a much higher voltage than the controllers can reach (600V vs. 250V), but I understand that just means top speed is limited as opposed to torque; I assume their industrial drivers running on higher line voltage are what can reach the rest of the way up there. It would really be helpful if that company would publish a cross-reference of compatible motors/drivers like most of the others do. Parker ('compumotor series') also has some products that look usable, but seem to run at slower speeds than Baldor's.

Teaser picture for ya'll...
Assembly Concept.png
Work envelope of 4"OD (up to 9" in a pinch) x 8" length; tool travel 6" in X & 15" in Z; overall size 32" long x 26" deep x 30" high. 5C spindle bore and AXA toolpost in the current incarnation. NEMA23 steppers on X & Z axis, probably 400 oz-in range, run off a Gecko controller or something similarly well-known. Future planned additions are a tailstock that hangs down from the lower step surface, a rotating tool changer mounted on the large inclined surface, and a chip-evacuation auger along the very bottom/front corner --not really pursuing these goals at this time, but leaving some room for them.
 
Likely silly idea
A servo motor isn't too different from a plain old DC motor (in fact the ones on my mill are just expensive DC motors with encoders on them running @72v)

Ampflows are pretty powerful motors (up to around 11 horsepower at 48vdc) you'd just need to figure out an encoder
 
A servo motor isn't too different from a plain old DC motor

There is no advantage to using brushed DC motors anymore. High performance DC brushed motors aren't that much cheaper than equivalent brushless DC motors but they do have some disadvantages: 1) they are noisy; 2) they require periodic replacement of brushes; 3) commutation is fixed so they don't offer precise torque control; 4) they aren't capable of field weakening, allowing them to run above their rated RPM for corresponding rated voltage (constant power rather than constant torque region).
 
There is no advantage to using brushed DC motors anymore. High performance DC brushed motors aren't that much cheaper than equivalent brushless DC motors but they do have some disadvantages: 1) they are noisy; 2) they require periodic replacement of brushes; 3) commutation is fixed so they don't offer precise torque control; 4) they aren't capable of field weakening, allowing them to run above their rated RPM for corresponding rated voltage (constant power rather than constant torque region).

Sensorless brushless motors have zero startup torque as they need to go through a startup sequence in order to begin spinning under power
Sensored ones and controllers to go with get very pricey very quickly.

a couple hundred dollar magmotor and hundred dollar servo controller gives enough power for me, an equal sensored brushless and controller would cost ten times as much.
 
*quick question at last paragraph

There's also the aspect that a permanent-magnet async motor has far lower turing inertia than anything using windings at a given power level (even brushless). That's why servos are able to start/stop/accelerate so quickly, and why they bothered to develop control systems more responsive than a VFD. Also why a servo the size of a Heineken can puts out the same power as an induction motor the size of a bowling ball.

But yeah, much like how data transfer tech advances are rapidly blurring the line between (and dis/advantages of) servos and steppers, power supply advances are blurring the line between speed-controlled motors (of various types) and true servo systems. It's really confusing for a neophyte like myself when ignorant/misleading sellers are offering "closed loop stepper motor servos" as if that isn't a soup-sandwich of jargon, lol. Spent a half hour looking over an Allen Bradley catalog at 110V-fed servo drives, before I realized it was really a list of VFD's ('inverter drives') that simply had many of the same features/terms, but really weren't set up for precise closed-loop position control.

If I didn't need to do anything under 30rpm or so, I'd be going simple speed controller all the way. But I really want to be able to mill helixes & do engraving, and a VFD simply won't control things precisely enough (well, the really nice modern ones that are indistinguishable from servo drivers might)

Here's what I'm picking out so far;
Baldor BSM80C-375AF: ~1kW, max speed 4000rpm, 2500ppr encoder, 3.6N-m
Baldor FMH2A09TR-EN43: 9A max cont. (18A peak will pop my breaker), 110VAC & 24VDC input, step/dir input (also analog +/-10V for speed/torque)

Given the speed & encoder, I should able to drive the thing on pulses alone just like a stepper motor across its full range so long as I can generate them at 167kHz from the controller. That's certainly the most convenient option, that won't require swapping into analog speed control mode halfway through a job & back. It looks like several of the common hobby-level motion controllers are now capable of this output speed (e.g. smoothstepper, etc) without losing low-speed resolution.

Rough block diagram:
Mach3/4 laptop -> ethernet -> TBD Motion Controller/Breakout Board -> Baldor Microflex Driver & Servo, TBD qty(2) Stepper Drives/Motors

"Ampflows are pretty powerful motors (up to around 11 horsepower at 48vdc) you'd just need to figure out an encoder"
Also how to run an 11hp motor from a residential wall outlet...figuring out the encoder feedback such that it is reliable & accurate is no small task from what I understand. I'm having a hard enough time just figuring out 'turn key' factory paired setups, let alone designing my own closed loop system; I studied Mechanical precisely so I wouldn't have to do that stuff, lol.

*Quick question; tons and tons of Baldor/etc motors & controllers on ebay & elsewhere in all sorts of configurations for pennies on the dollar; where the heck are their cables? Do surplussers just throw them away? That seems crazy, since they rival the cost of the used components wherever a few are listed, and the components are useless without them, so it's not like the sellers simply aren't bothering with the small-fry items. A new set of power/encoder cables for those Baldor units (still in production, but not top-flight items) is well over a grand! I'll be making my own from bailing wire & chewing gum at those prices.

TCB
 
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Baldor BSM80C-375AF

That Baldor is a beauty and, as usual, expensive as hell. One thing about this motor is that it is actually a permanent magnet synchronous motor, a cousin to the brushless DC motor but with sinusoidal rather than trapezoidal BEMF. You can't do much better than that motor, it is pretty much state of the art. Looking forward to seeing it in action, if you decide to go that route.
 
Sensorless brushless motors have zero startup torque

You are right about sensorless brushless motors and low startup torque. The "equivalent" to a brushed DC is a brushless DC with hall sensors. There are several hobby lathes and mills being sold with this kind of spindle motor, usually providing around 1-1.5kW.
 
You are right about sensorless brushless motors and low startup torque. The "equivalent" to a brushed DC is a brushless DC with hall sensors. There are several hobby lathes and mills being sold with this kind of spindle motor, usually providing around 1-1.5kW.

Absolutely
However these are manufactured overseas (typically) and the watts shown are the watts the motor consumes, not the actual output watts, which makes it very difficult to spec out. (ex: I have a local with a 2.something KW spindle, my 1hp bridgeport cuts much faster, and better) Don't buy anything you can't get a power curve from the manufacturer for.
 
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