john lucas
AAW Forum Expert
I'm really unfamiliar with servo motors. What are the advantages and disadvantages. To they require a special power supply. Can you retrofit one to other lathes, specifically mini or midi lathes.
I believe John posed a general question about servo motors and was not soliciting criticism of a particular product or of anyone's lathe choice.I read thru the specs for the lathe in question;
The propaganda portion said the motor can be loaded up to 3 HP.
The Servo controller and the servo motor will likely only be available from Harvey at inflated prices and are probably low quality.
I was only criticizing the deceptive marketing and trying to find a reason for a servo motor verses an ordinary induction motor.I believe John posed a general question about servo motors and was not soliciting criticism of a particular product or of anyone's lathe choice.
Basics of a servo motor, as I understand it, the motor can vary speed by means of changing supplied voltage.. a servo motor would have a speed sensing device so that when you set it to a specific speed it can detect when it starts to slow down (loading) or speed up (unloading) and within milliseconds, vary the voltage going to the motor in order to maintain a constant speed .. So, it seems to me, if the motor has enough power/torque in reserve, it should be able to maintain a very consistent and constant speed regardless of the amount of loading being applied to the work... Much like the Anti-Lock brakes system on a car, (and/or traction control system) which can spot changes in wheel speeds relative to other wheels and apply braking logic to select corner of the car to maintain traction or prevent lockup... by means of speed sensors... Seems to me, a servo motor would typically be able to maintain a smooth steady speed in varying conditions, as opposed to a belt drive which can slip or be limited to its torque to within a specific speed range (Torque curve)... But then, I am no engineer.. it is just my understanding of how a servo motor (as far as maintaining speed) would work.. The servo motors I am more familiar with are more like robotic controls (electronic governors, electronic throttles, electronic climate controls, and the like.. which are more of a linear control as opposed to rotational control)
A DC motor is not controlled by a Variable Frequency Drive, there is only 1 type of motor that operates on a VFD and that is an AC 3 phase induction motor. The VFD / 3ph motor combination will maintain a constant speed sufficient for wood turning. Servo motors are normally used to supply adjustable constant speed and positioning control on machine tool axis.Assuming that Brian is correct, and maintaining a constant speed is the difference between it and a DC motor with VFD, it leads one to contemplation as applied to woodturning. I'm theorizing how that can be applied to what we know concerning how vibrations emanating from the wood relates to the load applied to it, as it varies for light vs heavy cuts, and the overall quality of the cut.
A DC motor is not controlled by a Variable Frequency Drive, there is only 1 type of motor that operates on a VFD and that is an AC 3 phase induction motor. The VFD / 3ph motor combination will maintain a constant speed sufficient for wood turning. Servo motors are normally used to supply adjustable constant speed and positioning control on machine tool axis.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see other companies start using servo motors in the future.Thanks for your input Rusty...not worried. Not new, just different application.![]()
I wouldn’t be surprised to see other companies start using servo motors in the future.
Odie your dc motor is controlled by a vsd. The variable speed drive changes the voltage to control the speed. Hence they can be used on dc and ac motors. A vfd changes the frequency of the wave and the voltage and hence can only be used on a ac motor, Don is right. Unless I’m reading your reply wrong Odie.Hello Don......This is the motor I have on my Woodfast lathe:
https://www.woodturnerscatalog.com/p/110/5521/leeson-DC-Variable-Speed-Control?term=leeson+minarik&term=leeson minarik
Leeson DC Variable Speed Control 1-1/2 HP 220v
-----odie-----
OK, got it, Glenn! I wasn't aware of the difference.Odie your dc motor is controlled by a vsd. The variable speed drive changes the voltage to control the speed. Hence they can be used on dc and ac motors. A vfd changes the frequency of the wave and the voltage and hence can only be used on a ac motor, Don is right. Unless I’m reading your reply wrong Odie.
Assuming that Brian is correct, and maintaining a constant speed is the difference between it and a DC motor with VFD, it leads one to contemplation as applied to woodturning. My initial thought on this, is a servo motor has no benefit applicable to woodturning.
I’m not seeing any benefit either. I assume my Oneway has enough torque to keep a constant speed. And I doubt the Harvey lathe cannot be stalled like any other lathe. Now if it had a 20 hp servo motor that would make a difference, but it would also mske a similar difference if my oneway had a 20 hp motor.OK, got it, Glenn! I wasn't aware of the difference.
In my original sentence using VFD incorrectly, the substance remains the same. I'm not seeing any benefit to a constant speed, for the reasons I mentioned. Now, if there is a real benefit to the act of woodturning, and not about the size of the motor (as in @Jon Minerich post above this one), I'd like to know more about it.
We used to have our 15 HP servo motors rebuilt for $5,000 because a new one was around $11,000.One thing for sure is if the servo motor or its drive needs replacement it's going to be more expensive than an equivalent AC motor or VFD.
Example: on one of my machine tools a Baldor servo motor was not performing as it should. Baldor referred me to a factory authorized repair outfit to have the motor repaired. After a $200 diagnosis they decided it couldn't be repaired. $1100 later I ended up with a new Baldor servo motor. That was a lot of money for a motor of that size. $1100 will go quite a ways toward an AC motor and a VFD.
If maintaining constant speed (rpm) under load is the issue you can achieve that with a flux vector AC motor and VFD (more expensive than conventional AC motor and VFD). The motor rpm is monitored by the drive and corrects as needed.
I know a couple members here at least that have a T60. Harvey has been building machinery for other companies for years (I believe they built the powermatics, for one, if I recall right....) but they have been making their own branded machinery for quite a while, and I have not heard much in the way of negatives from users (insofar as my YouTube viewing habits permit), and I know their Hand tools (Bridge City Tool Works) are superb top of the line quality (Not just pretty , but highly usable and innovative to boot).. I would have one (Harvey) myself, if I had the moolah (and I keep debating whether to go for a T40 when I have the money , and get a bed extension ... or save up and get the Jet 1840 I can barely afford... I keep going back and forth, but still havent come up with the budget to pull the trigger either way yet) I do believe they are quite top notch in customer service however.Does anyone know how long Harvey has been manufacturing the T40&T60?
And is anyone here using the T60 for a good amount of time that could offer input?
Thanks
No. DVR motor is an AC switched reluctance motor (can find explanations online). The dvr setup does monitor shaft speed and maintain speed. To @odie ’s point, not relevant for finish cuts but it sure helps when hogging off waste material. The torque difference between 1-1/2 hp rated dvr vs vfd system is substantial.One question from me, the Nova DVR motors, are they any relation to the servo motors? I am still surprised at how much torque they have for such a small motor, size wise anyway....
Yes a servo motor could be retrofitted, but the mounts would be custom one-offs. Would be interesting to see a price comparison of servo and vfd drive systems for such a project. I suspect the servo system could be substantially more $’s.I'm really unfamiliar with servo motors. What are the advantages and disadvantages. To they require a special power supply. Can you retrofit one to other lathes, specifically mini or midi lathes.
Since HP is a combination of torque and rated speed what is the rated speed of the DVR motor rated at 1 -1/2 HP?No. DVR motor is an AC switched reluctance motor (can find explanations online). The dvr setup does monitor shaft speed and maintain speed. To @odie ’s point, not relevant for finish cuts but it sure helps when hogging off waste material. The torque difference between 1-1/2 hp rated dvr vs vfd system is substantial.
Don’t know, Nova doesn’t say, and doesn’t publish an rpm/hp-t chart, though I wish they would.Since HP is a combination of torque and rated speed what is the rated speed of the DVR motor rated at 1 -1/2 HP?