hi I can see from the last mail,that you could have had a sound sleep and make the group get the answer :) anyway.. your question on doing so to make it run very slow .. Once I made a x-t writer , it used among other things a cassette deck to move the paper with the pinch roller..and I needed times as 10 mm /hour.so I gave the motor so small pulses that it turned less than 1 revolution .. here was the belt also a problem..but if I turn it on now, I'm sure it works. This was ,I think it was made with a 555 and a driver transistor. So you search for this circuit and then try it. alex --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Richard Spelling <rls@...> wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Went to bed tired and annoyed I couldn't easily find a slower gear motor > for the laminator. > > Dreamed about building a magical speed controller that would let me run > the existing motor infinitely slow. > > Realized I could use "temporal kinetic and thermal stabilization" since > it's a worm gear motor. > > I.E., I build a standard PWM controller but set the frequency real > sloowwwwww. > > Imagine having the speed turned down real low. Along comes a pulse. The > motor spins up and turns the worm screw a revolution or two, then spins > down. The board advances a fraction of an inch. An in-determinant amount > of time later, along comes another pulse. > > Yes, it's "jogging" the board forward and not continuous motion, but > between jogs it sits between the rollers long enough for the heat to > transfer through the paper. > > I'm thinking about 10Hz. > > Whatcha think? Just another crazy idear from Richard? > > Now I just need to build the board. > > Wait a second, I need my laminator to build the board to fix the laminator! > > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org > > iEYEARECAAYFAkvZmXgACgkQ7R3zOzCoP9TDTwCgif7mfECp/31+fYq2RX/lkLca > rcgAnjxf1FYgfzIrYMy3PBHKB2I1CcW6 > =z+Py > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- >
Message
Re: Speed control for laminator motor
2010-04-30 by christiansen_alex@hotmail.com
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