Hello everyone,
I was wondering if any experts on this forum could help me with an issue I'm having with my early 2000's Körner micromachining center. This particular machine was manufactured in Germany around the year 2001 by MASCHINENFABRIK KÖRNER GMBH that has since stopped operations, so support from that side is pretty hard to come by.
The issue I'm having has to do with the Z-axis servo motor and its tendency to oscillate or hum at a very high frequency at certain points of its travel. The humming only happens when the Z-axis is idle and in the right spot along with the servo's rotation. I've tested the axis with an indicator attached to the axis, and you can creep up on these areas with the jog function, moving at 0.01mm increments. When the servo is at this spot you can see the indicator move about 5 microns in both directions very rapidly. It stays there oscillating between the positions and can only be stopped by jogging the axis.
Here is some information about the servo motor:
Make: Dunkermotoren
Model: GR80x80 brushed DC servo 224 watt
Encoder: 1000 ppr encoder with two channels (4000 total pulses)
Brake: Yup
The servo drives are digital, manufactured by the same company that made the machine. I've attached a picture of the Z-axis PID settings that can be adjusted inside the software.
PID settings
I was wondering if any experts on this forum could help me with an issue I'm having with my early 2000's Körner micromachining center. This particular machine was manufactured in Germany around the year 2001 by MASCHINENFABRIK KÖRNER GMBH that has since stopped operations, so support from that side is pretty hard to come by.
The issue I'm having has to do with the Z-axis servo motor and its tendency to oscillate or hum at a very high frequency at certain points of its travel. The humming only happens when the Z-axis is idle and in the right spot along with the servo's rotation. I've tested the axis with an indicator attached to the axis, and you can creep up on these areas with the jog function, moving at 0.01mm increments. When the servo is at this spot you can see the indicator move about 5 microns in both directions very rapidly. It stays there oscillating between the positions and can only be stopped by jogging the axis.
Here is some information about the servo motor:
Make: Dunkermotoren
Model: GR80x80 brushed DC servo 224 watt
Encoder: 1000 ppr encoder with two channels (4000 total pulses)
Brake: Yup
The servo drives are digital, manufactured by the same company that made the machine. I've attached a picture of the Z-axis PID settings that can be adjusted inside the software.
PID settings