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Rotary Encoders 1

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Ridly

Industrial
Sep 8, 2005
7
Is there any way to bench test a (0-499 pulse) enconder by
bench testing. I`m trying to trouble shoot just this area of the machine that giving me problems. Thanks!
 
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One way is to rotate the encode with a drill motor and look at the pulse outputs with an oscilliscope. Missing pulses can sometimes be detected this way.
 
Just count the pulses..[bugeyed]

Just kidding. djs has a good idea there. Run it as slow as you can while looking at the scope. Get a good see-able scope picture with about 30-40 pulses on the display and you should be able to see any dropped pulses pretty easily.

Often "dirt" could bridge some engravings and cause lost pulses.
 
Better still (I use it routinely) is to run the encoder in the application. Trig on [pulse width < measured pulse width]. That will reveal any missing pulses. Remember that a bad bearing can produce a good pattern until there is some axial play - then the bad pulses show up.

Also, it is not sufficient to check just one channel. Most encoders have A and B channels, sometimes also /A and /B (complementary channels). Check that phase shift between A and B is 90 degrees +/- a tolerance, usually 20 - 30 degrees.

Also check zero level and high level as well as noise.

Same checks can be made out of the application. Run in a test bench or couple to shaft of asynch motor with a piece of rubber hose. Be careful - make sure that the encoder and motor do not get loose.

There is a glossary that can be of some help.

Gunnar Englund
 
Good ideas there skogs. I was thinking... I would leave it in the application too. You could easily end up with a fine "bench encoder".
 
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