P
Peter
I am hoping to build a controller board for this motor
http://www.faulhaber-group.com/uploadpk/EN_AM2224_PCS.pdf
which says is needs 0.125A (12V version), using the A3987 chip
http://www.allegromicro.com/en/Products/Part_Numbers/3987/3987.pdf
What I find staggering is that the above chip comes in a miniscule
package, yet it is rated at 1.5A and should thus easily cope with this
motor - by about a factor of 10.
Admittedly the PCB design rules for the A3987 are pretty specific, to
get the heat out of it, but in this application the heat generated
(I2R where R is the Rds - about 0.6 ohm max) should be miniscule - of
the order of 20mW.
I am really puzzled how such a motor could draw so little current. Is
that 0.125A figure meaningful? The coil resistance is 75 ohms so it
can't draw that much!
What concerns me is that I may be misunderstanding something basic
about the motor spec. But with the coil resistance apparently being 75
ohms, the most the motor could possibly draw (excluding transients
caused by the parallel capacitance of the coil) is 12/75 = 0.16A.
The price of the motor is interesting - about US$500!!
This one
http://www.allegromicro.com/en/Products/Part_Numbers/3986/3986.pdf
uses external MOSFETs and should be a lot more robust... but is it
necessary?
There is a vast difference - about 10x - between the torque of a
stepper like the one above and a brushless motor e.g.
http://www.faulhaber-group.com/uploadpk/EN_2444B_MIN.pdf
(roughly 10mNm v. 100mNm) which probably explains the different
currents involved.
I am new to stepping motors and just haven't come across a motor of
that size drawing so little current. But maybe stepping motors are
like that...
http://www.faulhaber-group.com/uploadpk/EN_AM2224_PCS.pdf
which says is needs 0.125A (12V version), using the A3987 chip
http://www.allegromicro.com/en/Products/Part_Numbers/3987/3987.pdf
What I find staggering is that the above chip comes in a miniscule
package, yet it is rated at 1.5A and should thus easily cope with this
motor - by about a factor of 10.
Admittedly the PCB design rules for the A3987 are pretty specific, to
get the heat out of it, but in this application the heat generated
(I2R where R is the Rds - about 0.6 ohm max) should be miniscule - of
the order of 20mW.
I am really puzzled how such a motor could draw so little current. Is
that 0.125A figure meaningful? The coil resistance is 75 ohms so it
can't draw that much!
What concerns me is that I may be misunderstanding something basic
about the motor spec. But with the coil resistance apparently being 75
ohms, the most the motor could possibly draw (excluding transients
caused by the parallel capacitance of the coil) is 12/75 = 0.16A.
The price of the motor is interesting - about US$500!!
This one
http://www.allegromicro.com/en/Products/Part_Numbers/3986/3986.pdf
uses external MOSFETs and should be a lot more robust... but is it
necessary?
There is a vast difference - about 10x - between the torque of a
stepper like the one above and a brushless motor e.g.
http://www.faulhaber-group.com/uploadpk/EN_2444B_MIN.pdf
(roughly 10mNm v. 100mNm) which probably explains the different
currents involved.
I am new to stepping motors and just haven't come across a motor of
that size drawing so little current. But maybe stepping motors are
like that...