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Thread: Stepper motor voltage question.
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01-22-2018, 09:40 AM #1
Stepper motor voltage question.
Given that you can use 12v stepper motors with both 12 and 24v power supplies and most motherboards will accept both 12 and 24v inputs.
What voltage are the motors being driven at with a 24v power supply in a dual voltage board ?
ie: why would 24v input make any real difference if the power is being stepped down to 12v anyway - assuming it is.
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01-22-2018, 01:06 PM #2
- Join Date
- Jun 2014
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24 volt power supplies will provide greater wattage to a heated bed, allowing for faster heating as well as lower current (smaller wiring). There may be other factors escaping my alleged mind.
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01-22-2018, 03:36 PM #3
Yes but how does it effect the stepper motors - you know, the actual question :-)
People say 24v is better for the motors - without saying they're using 24v stepper motors. So if the board is converting 24v to 12v for the motors - why would having 24v psu make the steppers run better ?
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02-02-2018, 07:44 AM #4
Stepper motors require some voltage but they really depend on current, you can supply them with 3, 6, 12, 24.36,48 as long as you don't exceed the current capability of the stepper. You can use most steppers that work at 12v on 24v as long as you set the current limits correctly.
If your board can accept 24V then usually it also using 24V to drive the steppers, it doesn't know that the steppers are any specific voltage , only what current they need based on the supply voltage.
The stepper controller slices up the power to the stepper to keep the current within the limit for the stepper. Why a higher voltage matters is that during this slicing up of power , to energize the stepper the first pulse or series of pulses is usually the full power supply voltage giving the stepper greater starting torque . Higher voltage lets you accelerate faster and also brake faster around corners since you have more holding force in the motor. Once the motor has started to move then the stepper controller will continue to lower the voltage in each pulse to keep the current level below the limit.
The cost of higher voltage is heat on the motor and controller. Most commercial machines use 48V and higher .
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02-16-2018, 03:15 PM #5
thank you :-)
See people THAT'S how you answer a question !
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