Stepper Motors

From RepRap
Revision as of 22:58, 23 March 2010 by Cefiar (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

If going for the smaller NEMA 14 motors, aim for the high torque option. You need approximately 1400 g.cm of holding torque or more to be safe. NEMA 14s are neater, lighter and smaller, but can be hard to get hold of. NEMA 17s are quite easy to get in the specification that Mendel needs, but are bulkier and less neat. NEMA 14s are running near the edge of their envelope: they will get warm. NEMA 17s are well inside what they can do, and will run cool.

Below is a list of possible suppliers and motors. Please add to it. If you have built a Mendel successfully with a given motor, remember to put Yes in the tested field.

Stepper Motors
Vendor (with link) Shipping location Manufacturer Model # Datasheet NEMA (Size) Torque Shaft Tested Additional notes
Motion Control Products Unknown Unknown FL35ST36-1004B FL35ST36-1004B Datasheet 14 . . Yes Used in mendel prototype
Active Robots UK Wantai/Phidget (?) Phidget 3301 3301 Datasheet 14  ?? 4.9mm Yes None
Zapp Automation Unknown Unknown SY42STH47-1684B SY42STH47-1684B Datasheet 17 . . Yes None
Interinar Electronics, LLC US Oriental Motors Vexta PX243M-01AA [www.interinar.com/public_docs/PX243M-01AA.pdf PX243M-01AA Datasheet] 17 . . Unknown Not strong enough for direct drive extruder, Uses Imperial #4-40 TPI mounting holes instead of M3 metric, Link seems dead 24/Mar/2010
Alltronics.com US Lin Engineering 4218L-01-10 4218L-01-10 Datasheet 17 ~53 Ncm 3/16 inch = 4.7625 mm (Round) Unknown None
Alltronics.com US Lin Engineering 4218L-01-11 4218L-01-11 Datasheet 17 (?) ~53 Ncm ~5 mm = 0.1968 inches (D-Shape) Yes None
Phidgets.com US Wantai/Phidgets(?) Wantai 42BYGHW811 3303 Datasheet 17 . 4.9mm Unknown None
Robot Gear AU Mercury Motor SM-42BYG011-25 SM-42BYG011 Datasheet 17 . 5mm No None

Old

This is the old page detail. It should remain here till the table conversion is complete.


If going for the smaller NEMA 14 motors, aim for the high torque option. You need approximately 1400 g.cm of holding torque or more to be safe. NEMA 14s are neater, lighter and smaller, but can be hard to get hold of. NEMA 17s are quite easy to get in the specification that Mendel needs, but are bulkier and less neat. NEMA 14s are running near the edge of their envelope: they will get warm. NEMA 17s are well inside what they can do, and will run cool.

Below is a list of possible suppliers and motors. Please add to it. If you have built a Mendel successfully with a given motor, put TESTED after the entry.

Europe

  • Zapp Automation supply a good NEMA 17. Their part number is SY42STH47-1684B. TESTED

US

Interinar Electronics, LLC

  • Vexta PX243M-01AA This motor will work ok for driving the axis but is not strong enough for a directly driven pinchwheel extruder.
    • torque = ~21 Ncm
    • Note: Uses Unified Thread Standard {UTS}#4 TPI mounting holes instead of M3 metric.

Alltronics.com

  • Lin Engineering 4218L-01-10 These appear to have a round shaft without any flats which is good for a splined extruder. Also, since the diameter is 3/16 you can easily buy matching pulleys from mcmaster or sdp-si.
    • torque = ~53 Ncm
    • shaft diameter = 3/16 inch = 4.7625 mm
  • Lin Engineering 4218L-01-11 These have a single flat on the shaft which works well for driving the axis using printed pulleys. TESTED
    • torque = ~53 Ncm
    • shaft diameter = ~5 mm = 0.1968 inches

Phidgets.com

Asia/Pacific