Derek Mackenzie | 27/02/2021 20:11:10 |
5 forum posts | Does anyone have a recommendation for a 250W (or thereabouts) variable speed motor for a small lathe & mill? Preferably a reasonable price, quiet, small with speed controllable through Gcode? |
Emgee | 27/02/2021 20:41:54 |
2610 forum posts 312 photos | Hi Derek A 3 phase delta connected motor operating at 230v will do what you require if controlled by a VFD. If buying a new motor best to get one that is suited to VFD operation so full benefit at low speeds can be achieved. Emgee Edited By Emgee on 27/02/2021 20:51:42 |
not done it yet | 27/02/2021 22:52:11 |
7517 forum posts 20 photos | Thereabouts As Emgee, but in addition a motor that is a little too powerful could be run in star configuration with the VFD. A half horse power motor (a common size) would be reduced to around 220W. |
Steviegtr | 27/02/2021 23:24:29 |
![]() 2668 forum posts 352 photos | With most vfd's i have worked on. You can use 0-10volts for speed control or 4-20mA & some have rs232 input too. Steve. |
Derek Mackenzie | 28/02/2021 23:32:26 |
5 forum posts | Thanks for the replies, but those types of motors appear to be too big for the space I have available. I am planning on fitting a Taig micro lathe (with 5C headstock) in front of the table of my Taig CNC mill so the mill drives a rear toolpost in the X & Y axes (now Z & X respectively for the lathe) for turning mainly brass up to 1" maximum diameter by 3" length. This all has to fit into the current mill enclosure which gives a maximum of around 4" diameter for the motor. This is to replace my current old East German HobbyMAT lathe that I converted to CNC over a decade ago. The problem with the latter is both backlash and being a bit too stiff for the Z axis stepper. I have given up trying to improve both of those and am now looking for alternatives - real CNC lathes are too expensive & too big. Cheers Edited By Derek Mackenzie on 28/02/2021 23:33:13 |
Emgee | 28/02/2021 23:38:31 |
2610 forum posts 312 photos | You could go for 1 of the PM DC motors being sold on eBay now that can be speed controlled manually, you could still start/stop via a cnc controlled relay and manually adjust the speed as required. These motors will be noisier than any AC motor. Emgee |
Steviegtr | 28/02/2021 23:53:23 |
![]() 2668 forum posts 352 photos | Or you could if finances are short. Buy a sewing machine motor with foot pedal . They are quite powerful. Steve. |
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