2:09 NOH! there is COM port on acorn or whatever it was.so that COM goes all ENA- DIR- PUL- ST1 goas PUL+, DR1 to DIR+, EN1 to ENA+,but yeah they work both ways...if.try other way if it not work lol!
Adam, do those drivers/steppers take 60VAC or are you Rectifying that 60VAC through a full wave birdge rectifier to get DC and smoothing out the pulses with a capacitor? Just asking as I have never seen a 60VAC stepper, only DC.
Brian G yes they take 60VAC directly, which is why I went with these drives and a single toroidal 220VAC to 60VAC transformer. The drives also have the ability to take DC if you want to do that instead.
I'm sure you got it by now but im pretty sure its to do with the motor encoder wires not being wired right.had the same thing happen but found some other wire schematics online that were way better then what came with the unit and got them working after that. what was the issue in your case? thanks
You asked earlier what I was asking about, well I just got all my motors turning. ( I hooked up step and direction to the DB25 connector for all three drives and capped off the ena- lines, I left the ena+ hooked up. I get all motors turning now.) The biggest thing now is how to set the cnc 12 settings to my drives. Like I asked earlier it’d be invaluable if you could show the settings you have in cnc12. I have one other question, do you have any issues with your breaker tripping with that toroidal transformer? Or did you use some type of resistor for the influx of power at startup?
trialnterror sorry for the super late reply. I hope you got everything figured out. I’m still using the bench test configuration to run my CNC. Not sure if that’s a bad thing for some reason. I’m not (and was never) tripping my 20A breaker, but I was blowing fuses before I put in the AC relay and series resistor to deal with the inrush current.
@@adamdebowski2037 I got everything figured out, I bought a d curve (I believe it’s called) breaker which handles the toroidal inrush current. I am also using bench test configuration right now
Hello and congratulations on your achievement. why do you use a toroidal transformer and why not a classic 60 volt power supply . thank you for your answer
daniel RICAUD classic DC power supply would also work. These drive are able to take both AC and DC, and I believe toroidal transformers are cheaper. I would recommend DC power supply because you will not have to address the problem of inrush current (to toroidal transformer) blowing fuses in your panel.
After doing research centroid recommends to hook these to the DB25 connector and not hook up the ena lines???? (Enable) it’d be cool if you could chime in!
Hey - sorry on the late reply. The motors drivers were enabled by default. You are correct, I do not have the enablines hooked in and I am NOT using the db25 connector.
What you will find with these is the wiring diagram supplied is incorrect in many occasions, open the encoder carefully and look at the correct configuration.
What do you mean? What would you like to see, exactly? You are just trying to bump a motor and get it communicating kinda thing? Do you have the same drivers? Are you using AC or DC power into the drivers?
Adam Debowski it would be really cool if you could do a video of the settings you have in cnc12 kind of a walk thru ....I’m lost there and if you changed any dip switches on the drivers.
austin bob super easy - you’ve got the step and direction cables crossed... silly problem I spent a long time troubleshooting before I realized what I’d done!
2:09 NOH! there is COM port on acorn or whatever it was.so that COM goes all ENA- DIR- PUL-
ST1 goas PUL+, DR1 to DIR+, EN1 to ENA+,but yeah they work both ways...if.try other way if it not work lol!
You have to jumper the + signals to each other and from the V+ input.
Adam, do those drivers/steppers take 60VAC or are you Rectifying that 60VAC through a full wave birdge rectifier to get DC and smoothing out the pulses with a capacitor? Just asking as I have never seen a 60VAC stepper, only DC.
Brian G yes they take 60VAC directly, which is why I went with these drives and a single toroidal 220VAC to 60VAC transformer. The drives also have the ability to take DC if you want to do that instead.
I'm sure you got it by now but im pretty sure its to do with the motor encoder wires not being wired right.had the same thing happen but found some other wire schematics online that were way better then what came with the unit and got them working after that. what was the issue in your case? thanks
You asked earlier what I was asking about, well I just got all my motors turning. ( I hooked up step and direction to the DB25 connector for all three drives and capped off the ena- lines, I left the ena+ hooked up. I get all motors turning now.) The biggest thing now is how to set the cnc 12 settings to my drives. Like I asked earlier it’d be invaluable if you could show the settings you have in cnc12. I have one other question, do you have any issues with your breaker tripping with that toroidal transformer? Or did you use some type of resistor for the influx of power at startup?
trialnterror sorry for the super late reply. I hope you got everything figured out. I’m still using the bench test configuration to run my CNC. Not sure if that’s a bad thing for some reason. I’m not (and was never) tripping my 20A breaker, but I was blowing fuses before I put in the AC relay and series resistor to deal with the inrush current.
@@adamdebowski2037 I got everything figured out, I bought a d curve (I believe it’s called) breaker which handles the toroidal inrush current. I am also using bench test configuration right now
Hello and congratulations on your achievement.
why do you use a toroidal transformer and why not a classic 60 volt power supply .
thank you for your answer
daniel RICAUD classic DC power supply would also work. These drive are able to take both AC and DC, and I believe toroidal transformers are cheaper. I would recommend DC power supply because you will not have to address the problem of inrush current (to toroidal transformer) blowing fuses in your panel.
Thank you very much
EMI on switching power supply....
After doing research centroid recommends to hook these to the DB25 connector and not hook up the ena lines???? (Enable) it’d be cool if you could chime in!
Hey - sorry on the late reply. The motors drivers were enabled by default. You are correct, I do not have the enablines hooked in and I am NOT using the db25 connector.
4:32 reverse signal active high or active low
Do you figure out how wiring the drives ?
I did. My own very silly mistake. Had the step and direction signals crossed.
Do you have to set up your motors first? To get them to move? I have it on bench test. My st1 is going to pul - , st2 pul - st3 pul-
@Henry Luka I got it working see my channel
Hii I am in France
I have same issue with my hbs86h
It's holding motor axe but can't move
When try to move red light blinking
Any help
What you will find with these is the wiring diagram supplied is incorrect in many occasions, open the encoder carefully and look at the correct configuration.
what software did u use?
Could you do a video of how you got your motors turning? I have about the same setup.
What do you mean? What would you like to see, exactly? You are just trying to bump a motor and get it communicating kinda thing? Do you have the same drivers? Are you using AC or DC power into the drivers?
Adam Debowski it would be really cool if you could do a video of the settings you have in cnc12 kind of a walk thru ....I’m lost there and if you changed any dip switches on the drivers.
Adam Debowski oh yes I’m just trying to get my motors to move.
How did you fix this problem I'm having the same problem?
austin bob super easy - you’ve got the step and direction cables crossed... silly problem I spent a long time troubleshooting before I realized what I’d done!
You need to use a DB25 connection for 5v logic. The connections your using for step and direction are 24v logic.
what is the card communication ?
Brandon Aguilera I don’t understand