H.E.S. 24NCS Lathe (24 X 60) conversion
I purchased a machine shop from a retired machinist one year ago and am finally able to get serious about retrofitting the HES Lathe. It is an early 80's machine that had the original controller, drives, and motors stripped out when I received it. The original motors had been replaced with steppers and the new controller was made by Ahha, I am in the process of stripping the machine down now and rebuilding it with linuxcnc and Mesa cards. I have several questions to start with of what I am sure will be many.
First should I continue to use the stepper motors that are on this machine? I would like to price servos but don't even know where to start, where to buy, or what size. Any help here would be appreciated.
Second the machine has separate mpg's? for both the x and z axis that use motor generators and resolvers. The previous overhaul did not use these but they are still in place and might be good (might not also). If they are good is it possible and reasonably easy to use these with some combination of Mesa cards?
Third the previous owner had purchased a new ball screw to replace the old one on the x axis and I plan on putting this in but on the z axis there is about .005 of backlash, does anyone have thoughts on if I could get rid of most of this by replacing the balls in the nut? Or if this is a good idea?
Russell
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Were are you located? Maybe I can help you with hardware.
The use of steppers or servos depends, in my opinion on the size of the machine, although servos are "always" better.
Can you post a picture of the machine?
I am in a similar process of retrofiring using also mesa cards that I already have.
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First should I continue to use the stepper motors that are on this machine?
Well you have them, they are installed and I take it they work properly.
Second the machine has separate mpg's? for both the x and z axis that use motor generators and resolvers. The previous overhaul did not use these but they are still in place and might be good (might not also)
If you go with your steppers you will not need them, so if they are bad it will not matter.
Are the stepper drivers in good working condition?
Is the backlash the same across the entire length of the travel? Are you sure the backlash is the ball screw and not the thrust bearing?Third the previous owner had purchased a new ball screw to replace the old one on the x axis and I plan on putting this in but on the z axis there is about .005 of backlash
Rick G
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I don't have a picture that I can post right now but it is similar to the one at this website: fp1.centurytel.net/dansmachines/new_page_2.htm
Yea, I think I will go with the steppers for now and see how I like it. I am located in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Any help would be appreciated.
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First should I continue to use the stepper motors that are on this machine?
Well you have them, they are installed and I take it they work properly.
Second the machine has separate mpg's? for both the x and z axis that use motor generators and resolvers. The previous overhaul did not use these but they are still in place and might be good (might not also)
If you go with your steppers you will not need them, so if they are bad it will not matter.
Are the stepper drivers in good working condition?
Is the backlash the same across the entire length of the travel? Are you sure the backlash is the ball screw and not the thrust bearing?Third the previous owner had purchased a new ball screw to replace the old one on the x axis and I plan on putting this in but on the z axis there is about .005 of backlash
.
Rick G
Yes, the steppers do work properly but I worry about speed and accuracy. I do think for now I will probably stick with them though.
The resolvers are not used to report the position of the different axis's to the controller but to run the machine manually. They are not mpg's but I don't know what you would call them (maybe a manual analog generator MAG?). They work similar to an mpg in that you turn the dial and the machine moves that axis a certain amount in that direction. They would be convenient to have working but it is not make or break.
Yes, the motor drivers are working and I have several of the same model as back ups, they are about 10 - 15 years old now.
How could I determine if the backlash is in the screw or the thrust bearings? Is there an easy way to check this without the machine running?
Russell
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I read a few threads on here concerning wiring in resolvers and then the Hal files to make it work. First I am going to check the resolvers to see if they are still good. I could change them to encoders easily but don't want to spend the money if I don't need to, plus it seems like there will still need to be work with the Hal file with encoders on the dials for manually driving the carriage and cross slide.
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I don't know of any cheap and good ways to read resolvers. Both Mesa and Pico make good solutions, and I am using the Mesa card on my own machine. It only works with the N x 50pin Mesa PCI cards. (5i20, 5i23. Not the 5i25).I read a few threads on here concerning wiring in resolvers and then the Hal files to make it work. First I am going to check the resolvers to see if they are still good. I could change them to encoders easily but don't want to spend the money if I don't need to,
I have a cheap (but not good) way of doing it: wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ResolverToQuadratureConverter which might be adequate for MPG.
The Pico device converts resolver output to quadrature pulses, and that ought to work more readily with digital inputs. pico-systems.com/resolver.html
You might find it more cost-effective to swap to encoders, though.
If you were to find some suitable resolver-feedback servo motors (which seem to be cheaper, due to lack of demand, despite the fact that resolvers are more expensive and better than encoders) then the 6-axis Mesa card starts to look like a good solution.
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I have everything stripped out of the control box and am starting to remove all of the shielding and the paint. I will use a Sherwin Williams industrial paint to repraint and try to come close to the original color.
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I could also replace them but then which drives to go with, the motors are 7.8amps so if I went with the Gecko 203v I would lose 10% of that. I am tempted because these drives have worked so well on the mill. Can anyone tell me does the morphing from microsteping at low speeds to full steps at higher speeds really make a difference? I have not found, to my knowledge, other drives that offer the same feature.
I am open to ideas on this and any suggestions that are out there for making the current drives work or replacing them.
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