Thank you for your video. It was exactly what I was searching for. I’m wondering if you could assist me with a hopefully simple calculation? I’m trying to set up a cnc spindle with the Klipper software. I need to enter in the pwm frequency. I have the 180w stepper online version. Could you help me figure out what the pwm frequency would be? I don’t have a background in electronics. I want the max rpm to be 5000. Thank you and I enjoy your content.
Thank you for your comment. This servo can not run faster than 3000 rpm. I don't know the Stepperonline version, but I believe it's the same. Anyway, I am running mine with STEP/DIR commands, not pwm. Sorry, but I can't help regarding the pwm frequency.
For the application where I am using this servo a higher accuracy is not needed. Anyway, people get fooled by the numbers. Setting to the highest steps per rev will give you higher accuracy but will also cost you torque and also demands very high pulsing frequency, which can be demanding if you have more axis to drive as well, so it's a compromise. In my case, this motor is a spindle motor spinning a chuck and I simply don't need higher accuracy, will have no benefit from it. I need the highest possible torque with good accuracy for angle positioning, and with 400 steps per rev I get the optimal results.
@ okay, thanks for the information. However, now I’m curious when the drop off in torque occurs. I was thinking of setting my PPR to 1600 since that would still give me a theoretical travel accuracy of 3.125 micron with a 2-1 belt reduction and a 10mm lead on my XY axis. Will I be losing torque here?
Hi, do you know if it can work with 48V PSU? Similar servo from stepper online supposedly works fine on 48V. I would like to avoid purchasing new PSUs in case I'd go woth these servos.
Great, thank you for confirming this. Got some pretty good 7.3A 48V PSUs, so I'd like to keep them for the servo setup. I asked the manufacturer but they did recommend to stick with 36V so I was a bit confused. For refference here is the StepperOnline servo, very similar www.omc-stepperonline.com/integrated-servo-motor/nema-23-integrated-easy-servo-motor-180w-3000rpm-0-6nm-84-98oz-in-20-50vdc-brushless-dc-servo-motor.html , Clough42 did test it and you can find it on his channel.
@@crabsshed I did check out the Stepperonline version, but did not like it because it does not have enable signal. Beware, if you feel you need that, then don't buy the Stepperonline motor. I sent them a question, and got the answer that the enable/disable can only be controlled through serial com port, which is totally unacceptable in my opinion.
@@AdaptingCamera Yes, I am aware of that, and that is exactly why I am liking the JMC servo more. Going to order one for testing and see how it works for me.
Yes, as it is shown here: ruclips.net/video/NKZBIqMDUL8/видео.htmlfeature=shared&t=290 that's normal, but if the red starts blinking then you have a problem.
Mine never gets hot, but I think there isn't a problem, since stepper motors and servo motors can get hot, up to 50-70 degrees Celsius should be normal.
You asked for subscription to your vid, and I'm doing it. Learned a lot you have no clue how helpful just showing everything is. Thanks!
sorry can you explain me about testing wiring this servo motor?
Especiallny orange and red wire from pul+ and pul-
Thank you for your video. It was exactly what I was searching for. I’m wondering if you could assist me with a hopefully simple calculation? I’m trying to set up a cnc spindle with the Klipper software. I need to enter in the pwm frequency. I have the 180w stepper online version. Could you help me figure out what the pwm frequency would be? I don’t have a background in electronics. I want the max rpm to be 5000. Thank you and I enjoy your content.
Thank you for your comment. This servo can not run faster than 3000 rpm. I don't know the Stepperonline version, but I believe it's the same. Anyway, I am running mine with STEP/DIR commands, not pwm. Sorry, but I can't help regarding the pwm frequency.
I’m curious as to why you sent the PPV to 400. Isn’t a higher PPV better for accuracy? What am I missing?
For the application where I am using this servo a higher accuracy is not needed. Anyway, people get fooled by the numbers. Setting to the highest steps per rev will give you higher accuracy but will also cost you torque and also demands very high pulsing frequency, which can be demanding if you have more axis to drive as well, so it's a compromise. In my case, this motor is a spindle motor spinning a chuck and I simply don't need higher accuracy, will have no benefit from it. I need the highest possible torque with good accuracy for angle positioning, and with 400 steps per rev I get the optimal results.
@ okay, thanks for the information. However, now I’m curious when the drop off in torque occurs. I was thinking of setting my PPR to 1600 since that would still give me a theoretical travel accuracy of 3.125 micron with a 2-1 belt reduction and a 10mm lead on my XY axis. Will I be losing torque here?
Hi, do you know if it can work with 48V PSU? Similar servo from stepper online supposedly works fine on 48V. I would like to avoid purchasing new PSUs in case I'd go woth these servos.
Hi, Yes, it works with 48V, I run mine with 48V and it is specified for 50V. I don't know the one Stepperonline is selling.
Great, thank you for confirming this. Got some pretty good 7.3A 48V PSUs, so I'd like to keep them for the servo setup. I asked the manufacturer but they did recommend to stick with 36V so I was a bit confused.
For refference here is the StepperOnline servo, very similar www.omc-stepperonline.com/integrated-servo-motor/nema-23-integrated-easy-servo-motor-180w-3000rpm-0-6nm-84-98oz-in-20-50vdc-brushless-dc-servo-motor.html ,
Clough42 did test it and you can find it on his channel.
@@crabsshed I did check out the Stepperonline version, but did not like it because it does not have enable signal. Beware, if you feel you need that, then don't buy the Stepperonline motor. I sent them a question, and got the answer that the enable/disable can only be controlled through serial com port, which is totally unacceptable in my opinion.
@@AdaptingCamera Yes, I am aware of that, and that is exactly why I am liking the JMC servo more. Going to order one for testing and see how it works for me.
Hi, do you know how is the minimum rotation possible?
I need much less then 1rpm
Is the ihsv57 v552 servo able to run the code to load into the servo?
Sorry, I don't know what you mean. The servo is configurable but which code do you mean?
@@AdaptingCamera servo ihsv57-30-18-36-01-by
Is the blinking power light normal?
Yes, as it is shown here: ruclips.net/video/NKZBIqMDUL8/видео.htmlfeature=shared&t=290 that's normal, but if the red starts blinking then you have a problem.
@@AdaptingCamerathank you, I've heard that the green light should be solid.
Does the motor get hot like fire, mine does?
Mine never gets hot, but I think there isn't a problem, since stepper motors and servo motors can get hot, up to 50-70 degrees Celsius should be normal.