Andy Birko wrote:
npalen wrote:
Mike, are you saying that you have some low end torque now that you didn't have before?
This is something I've been wondering about. I'm getting a VFD powered spindle for my machine that apparently good down to about 4500rpm min. I guess you can go slower but you lose power and cooling ability. As far as I know, VFD controlled spindles are not speed controlled right? i.e. if you set it for 5krpm no load, it will drop in speed when you add a load yes?
If this is true, a router with superPID would I think, out perform a standard VFD/Spindle set up as it would increase power to maintain the set speed where the spindle would just bog down, at least at low speed.
I know that there's a feedback loop in Mach3 for spindle speed but I haven't looked into it much. I wonder if it's possible to add an optical sensor to a Spindle and get similar control. Anyone know?
I'm no expert on this, but since VFD powered spindles are controlled by the
frequency of the 3 phase current going to them, they should maintain a constant RPM under load even though they are usually "open loop" devices with no feedback like the Super PID router speed has. VFD spindles are a lot like stepper motors--they might drop some "steps" along the way, but the speed doesn't change much until it stalls. Routers are always running at 60 (or 50) Hertz, so there is no set "timing" that is determining RPM. It's a function of voltage/current exclusively.
On my Colombo spindle, unless I run it too slow, it doesn't change RPM under load. Too slow and it doesn't slow down--it stalls. The power curve on my spindle (and I think most spindles for that matter) really drops off quickly as the RPM/pulses per second drop. I was skeptical about the value of VFD spindles over routers until I got one. It's so much quieter, and has a lot more power than a router of the same rated HP.
Dave