ataslaki
Mechanical
- Dec 5, 2002
- 24
Mind boggling thing, which is above my head to understand. Did a search on the forum, but couldn't find anything as crazy as what's going on with my system.
I have an AC drive and a continuous duty motor. Controlled by a few sensors, the motor starts on command, and stops when it reaches end of travel (horizontal screw table) as signaled by a prox sensor.
Everything runs beautiful in the hours of 6:00am-9:00PM (night), but at around 9:30PM-6:00AM (night shift crew), the motor overtravels when it reaches the end. It sees the prox sensor, then the prox sensor sends the signal to the motor to stop (via the AC drive), but the appears that the command to stop the motor takes slightly longer at night and hence the overtravel.
Nobody changes anything on the AC frequency driver. All accel/decel/other paramters are as-is in the morning and night; but somehow things slow down at night and electrons move slower?
No additional machines start to run around 9:30PM, to cause a surge of some sort. No machines are turned down. On top of everything, the power supplied to the system comes from a special huge power "cleaner", which delivers 110.00VAC on the money, every time.
Any help in solving this vudu magic?
Thanks
I have an AC drive and a continuous duty motor. Controlled by a few sensors, the motor starts on command, and stops when it reaches end of travel (horizontal screw table) as signaled by a prox sensor.
Everything runs beautiful in the hours of 6:00am-9:00PM (night), but at around 9:30PM-6:00AM (night shift crew), the motor overtravels when it reaches the end. It sees the prox sensor, then the prox sensor sends the signal to the motor to stop (via the AC drive), but the appears that the command to stop the motor takes slightly longer at night and hence the overtravel.
Nobody changes anything on the AC frequency driver. All accel/decel/other paramters are as-is in the morning and night; but somehow things slow down at night and electrons move slower?
No additional machines start to run around 9:30PM, to cause a surge of some sort. No machines are turned down. On top of everything, the power supplied to the system comes from a special huge power "cleaner", which delivers 110.00VAC on the money, every time.
Any help in solving this vudu magic?
Thanks