Delta Tau 5xx-603869-xUxx manual Wiring Earth-Ground, Noise Problems, Earth Grounding Paths

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Brick Motion Controller Hardware Reference Manual

SYSTEM WIRING

WARNING:

Installation of electrical control equipment is subject to many regulations including national, state, local, and industry guidelines and rules. General recommendations can be stated but it is important that the installation be carried out in accordance with all regulations pertaining to the installation.

Noise Problems

When problems do occur often it points to electrical noise as the source of the problem. When this occurs, turn to controlling high-frequency current paths. If the grounding instructions do not work, insert chokes in the motor phases. These chokes can be as simple as several wraps of the individual motor leads through a ferrite ring core (such as Micrometals T400-26D). This adds high-frequency impedance to the outgoing motor cable thereby making it harder for high-frequency noise to leave the control cabinet area. Care should be taken to be certain that the core’s temperature is in a reasonable range after installing such devices.

Wiring Earth-Ground

Panel wiring requires that a central earth-ground location be installed at one part of the panel. This electrical ground connection allows for each device within the enclosure to have a separate wire brought back to the central wire location. Usually, the ground connection is a copper plate directly bonded to the back panel or a copper strip with multiple screw locations. The Brick Motion Controller is brought to the earth-ground via the fourth pin on the J1 connector, located at the bottom of the unit through a heavy gauge, multi-strand conductor to the central earth-ground location.

Earth Grounding Paths

High-frequency noises from the PWM controlled power stage will find a path back to the drive. It is best that the path for the high-frequency noises be controlled by careful installation practices. The major failure in problematic installations is the failure to recognize that wire conductors have impedances at high frequencies. What reads 0 Ohms on a DVM may be hundreds of Ohms at 30MHz. Consider the following during installation planning:

1.Star point all ground connections. Each device wired to earth ground should have its own conductor brought directly back to the central earth ground plate.

2.Use unpainted back panels. This allows a wide area of contact for all metallic surfaces reducing high frequency impedances.

3.Conductors made up of many strands of fine conducts outperform solid or conductors with few strands at high frequencies.

4.Motor cable shields should be bounded to the back panel using 360-degree clamps at the point they enter or exit the panel.

5.Motor shields are best grounded at both ends of the cable. Again, connectors using 360-degree shield clamps are superior to connector designs transporting the shield through a single pin. Always use metal shells.

6.Running motor armature cables with any other cable in a tray or conduit should be avoided. These cables can radiate high frequency noise and couple into other circuits.

System Wiring

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Contents 125 Delta Tau Data Systems, Inc. Technical Support Safety InstructionsCopyright Information Operating ConditionsPage Page Revision History Page Table of Contents Brick Motion Controller Hardware Reference Manual Introduction Brick Motion Controller FeaturesBrick Motion Controller Hardware Reference Manual Brick Motion Controller Options Part NumberAnalog I/O Options Communication OptionsMacro and Special Feedback Options Use of Equipment Receiving and UnpackingBrick Motion Controller Hardware Reference Manual Wiring Earth-Ground Noise ProblemsEarth Grounding Paths Connectors Pin Symbol FunctionX1-X8 Encoder Input 1 to X11-12 Analog I/O Ch7 X11 and Ch8 X12, Optional X9/10 Female DB-9 Connector Pin # SymbolX11/12 Female DB-9 Connector Pin # Symbol Function X9-10 Analog I/O Ch5 X9 and Ch6 X10, OptionalX15 Watchdog X13 USB 2.0 ConnectorX14 RJ45, Ethernet Connector Pin # SymbolTB1 Power Connector S1 Re-Initialization on Reset ControlS2 Firmware Reload Enable Description J4 Limit Inputs 1-4 AxisJ5 Limit Inputs 5-8 Axis Limit and Flag Circuit WiringGND Sample J4/J5, Flags Wiring DiagramsAMP1-AMP8 Amplifier connections 1 to Amplifier Fault / Amplifier Enable diagrams J6 General Purpose I/O J6 General Purpose I/O Female DB-37 Connector Pin # SymbolSourcing Sinking Suggested M-var. # AddressJ7 Extra General Purpose I/O Optional Symbol FunctionSuggested M-var. # Address J8 Extra General Purpose I/O Optional J8 General Purpose I/O Female DB-37 Connector Pin # SymbolSuggested M-var. # Address GBL Sample J6/J7, I/O Wiring DiagramsFunction Pin # Setting up Quadrature EncodersSignal Format Hardware SetupChannel# Address Description Encoder Loss SetupSetting up the Analog Inputs optional Filtered DAC Outputs Configuration optionalBipolar Parameters to Set up Global Hardware Signals Parameters to Set Up Per-Channel Hardware Signals Multi-Channel Servo IC I-Variables Setting up for Pulse and Direction OutputSoftware Setup I7m00 Servo IC m MaxPhase/PWM Frequency ControlI7mn0 Servo IC m Channel n Encoder Decode Control I7mn6 Servo IC m Channel n Output Mode SelectSingle-Channel I-Variables I7m04 PFM Pulse Width ControlIxx31 Motor x Derivative Gain Ixx34 Motor xx Integration ModeIxx30 Motor xx Proportional Gain ExampleBrick Motion Controller Hardware Reference Manual Watchdog Timer Actions on Watchdog Timer TripDiagnosing Cause of Watchdog Timer Trip Troubleshooting Screw Lock Size for all DB-connectors DB- Connector Spacing SpecificationsX1-8 DB-15 Connectors for encoder feedback X9-12 DB-9 Connectors for Analog I/OType of Cable for Encoder Wiring Appendix a Schematics J6 and J7 General Purpose I/OInputs Outputs Opto Gnd PlaneLimits 1,2,3,4 J4 Limit Inputs for AxisLimits 5,6,7,8 J5 Limit Inputs for AxisDimensional Layout and Connector location