Showing posts with label micro motor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label micro motor. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Where to Find a Reliable Electric Brushless Lab Micro Motor Store

Looking for a Reliable Electric Brushless Lab Micro Motor ?

Where to Find a Reliable Electric Brushless Lab Micro Motor Store


Then look no further!

We’ve been repairing Electric Lab Micro Motors (KaVo, MUSS, Schick, NSK, etc…) for over 15 years and during this time we’ve seen the technological and reliability advancements that the Korean Saeshin company has been making. We’re very impressed and you’ll be even more impressed.

Saeshin OZ Black Brushless Electric Micro Motor for Dental Lab Professionals

Made in Korea with quality parts and German Bearings
12 Month Warranty
MAX speed: 50,000 RPM
Torque: Strong 7.8N.cm
Placement: Vertical or Horizontal
Input: 220-~240V 50/60Hz
Output: 230w
Direction: Forward and Reverse
Lower ongoing repair and servicing costs
Saeshin OZ Black Electric Lab Brushless Micro Motor Technical Diagram


See more:
http://www.dentalcompare.com/Restorative-Dentistry/4608-Dental-Laboratory-Handpieces-and-Motors/

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

The world's smallest and most powerful micro motor

Piezoelectric ultrasonic motors have two significant advantages, namely their high energy density and their simple structure, which both contribute to their miniaturization. We have built a prototype micro ultrasonic motor using a stator with a volume of approximately one cubic millimeter. Our experiments have shown that the prototype motor generates a torque of more than 10 μNm with a one cubic millimeter stator. This novel motor is now the smallest micro ultrasonic motor that has been developed with a practical torque.


Unveiling of the world's smallest and most powerful micro motors

Micro actuators are needed for numerous applications, ranging from mobile and wearable devices to minimally invasive medical devices. However, the limitations associated with their fabrication have restricted their deployment at the one-millimeter scale. The most common electromagnetic motors require the miniaturization of many complicated components such as coils, magnets, and bearings, and exhibit severe torque dissipation due to the scaling. Electrostatic motors enable excellent scalability by using microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology, but their weak driving force has limited their further development.

According to Mashimo, "The simplicity of the stator structure enabled the miniaturization without having to use any special machining process. This prototype stator is much simpler than those of other existing ultrasonic motors."
The next goal of this research is to improve the values of performance parameters for practical applications, such as energy efficiency and lifetime. In future, the proposed micro motors may actuate micro forceps embedded in endoscopes for safe and less-invasive operations.


https://community.smartthings.com/t/aeon-micro-motor-controller-dsc14104/15615

Friday, February 5, 2016

The difference between a DC micro motor and servo micro motor

A DC motor has a two wire connection. All drive power is supplied over these two wires—think of a light bulb. When you turn on a DC motor, it just starts spinning round and round. Most DC motors are pretty fast, about 5000 RPM (revolutions per minute).

With the DC marathon micro motor, its speed (or more accurately, its power level) is controlled using a technique named pulse width modulation, or simply PWM. This is idea of controlling the motor’s power level by strobing the power on and off. The key concept here is duty cycle—the percentage of “on time” versus“off time.” If the power is on only 1/2 of the time, the motor runs with 1/2 the power of its full-on operation.

If you switch the power on and off fast enough, then it just seems like the motor is running weaker—there’s no stuttering. This is what PWM means when referring to DC motors. The Handy Board’s DC motor power drive circuits simply switch on and off, and the motor runs more slowly because it’s only receiving power for 25%, 50%, or some other fractional percentage of the time.

A servo motor is an entirely different story. The servo motor is actually an assembly of four things: a normal DC motor, a gear reduction unit, a position-sensing device (usually a potentiometer—a volume control knob), and a control circuit.

The function of the servo is to receive a control signal that represents a desired output position of the servo shaft, and apply power to its DC motor until its shaft turns to that position. It uses the position-sensing device to determine the rotational position of the shaft, so it knows which way the motor must turn to move the shaft to the commanded position. The shaft typically does not rotate freely round and round like a DC motor, but rather can only turn 200 degrees or so back and forth.

The servo has a 3 wire connection: power, ground, and control. The power source must be constantly applied; the servo has its own drive electronics that draw current from the power lead to drive the motor.

The control signal is pulse width modulated (PWM), but here the duration of the positive-going pulse determines the position of the servo shaft. For instance, a 1.520 millisecond pulse is the center position for a Futaba S148 servo. A longer pulse makes the servo turn to a clockwise-from-center position, and a shorter pulse makes the servo turn to a counter-clockwise-from-center position.

The servo control pulse is repeated every 20 milliseconds. In essence, every 20 milliseconds you are telling the servo, “go here.”

To recap, there are two important differences between the control pulse of the servo motor versus the DC motor. First, on the servo motor, duty cycle (on-time vs. off-time) has no meaning whatsoever—all that matters is the absolute duration of the positive-going pulse, which corresponds to a commanded output position of the servo shaft. Second, the servo has its own power electronics, so very little power flows over the control signal. All power is draw from its power lead, which must be simply hooked up to a high-current source of 5 volts.

Contrast this to the DC brushless micro motor. On the Handy Board, there are specific motor driver circuits for four DC motors. Remember, a DC motor is like a light bulb; it has no electronics of its own and it requires a large amount of drive current to be supplied to it. This is the function of the L293D chips on the Handy Board, to act as large current switches for operating DC motors.

Plans and software drivers are given to operate two servo motors from the HB. This is done simply by taking spare digital outputs, which are used to generate the precise timing waveform that the servo uses as a control input. Very little current flows over these servo control signals, because the servo has its own internal drive electronics for running its built-in motors.