Product positioning and technical background
In the field of industrial automation, stepper motor drivers play a crucial role in converting pulse commands into motor winding currents. The 6410 two-phase bipolar stepper driver launched by Pacific Scientific is designed for applications that require high resolution, smooth motion, and stable operation over a wide speed range. This driver converts step and directional inputs into motor winding currents and integrates multiple patented technologies, including four phase PWM chopper regulation, digital electronic damping, and flexible micro step selection. Its output current can be selected in 8 levels between 0.625A RMS and 5A RMS through a dip switch, with a supply voltage range of 24 to 75V DC. It is compatible with Pacific Science Company's standard and high-performance series hybrid stepper motors, as well as most other brands of two-phase stepper motors.
Core technical characteristics
2.1 Four phase PWM chopping technology
The 6410 driver adopts a patented four phase pulse width modulation chopper circuit with a switching frequency of approximately 20kHz. This technology combines the advantages of cyclic and non cyclic current regulation, effectively suppressing the back electromotive force of the motor while maintaining a low chopping ripple current. The benefits brought by practical applications include significantly reduced heating of power tubes, minimal electromagnetic noise, and good current control even in the deceleration (braking) state of motors. The 20kHz chopping frequency is far beyond the upper limit of the audible range of the human ear, fundamentally eliminating the common "hissing" sound of traditional chopping drivers and making the equipment operate more quietly.
2.2 Microstep Resolution
6410 provides extremely rich options for micro step settings. When installing jumper wires marked with "Decimal" on the board (positions 3-4 of J6), optional step subdivisions include: full step, 1/2, 1/5, 1/10, 1/25, 1/50, 1/125, and 1/250. For motors with a standard 1.8 ° step angle, these settings correspond to 200, 400, 1000, 2000, 5000, 10000, 25000, and 50000 micro steps per revolution, respectively. When the jumper is removed, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, 1/64, 1/128, and 1/256 subdivisions can be selected, corresponding to 400 to 51200 micro steps per rotation. The main advantages of micro stepping are: significantly improving positioning resolution, making low-speed operation extremely smooth, and effectively avoiding low-speed resonance zones. In practical applications, it is recommended to choose a step angle of 1/4 or smaller for situations that require ultra-low speed or high precision.
2.3 Digital Electronic Damping
All open-loop stepper systems will experience inherent torque loss or even step loss in the medium speed range, which is rooted in the modulation of winding current by the back electromotive force of the motor, as well as the comprehensive resonance of electronic, magnetic and mechanical systems. The 6410 integrated digital electronic damping circuit (which can be enabled through the 4th bit of S1 switch) effectively suppresses intermediate frequency oscillation by advancing or delaying the switching time of the output current relative to the input pulse sequence. After enabling this function, the motor can still maintain sufficient torque throughout the entire medium speed range, as long as the load does not exceed the rated torque of the motor, it can avoid stepping out. This feature is enabled by default at the factory and is suitable for most applications; This function only needs to be turned off when the user uses precise pulse placement technology.
2.4 Idle Current Reduction
To reduce the heating of the motor and driver, 6410 is equipped with an idle current attenuation function. After a set delay (which can be set to 0.05 seconds, 0.1 seconds, or 1.0 seconds) after the last pulse input, the winding current will automatically decrease to 50% of the rated value. When the next step pulse arrives, the current immediately returns to 100%. This function can be enabled/disabled and delayed through the 5th position of S1 switch and jumper 7-8 of J6. After activation, the static holding torque is correspondingly reduced by about 50%, but in most positioning applications, this is still sufficient to maintain position locking while significantly reducing power consumption and temperature rise.
2.5-Step Input Filter
To enhance anti-interference capability, 6410 provides an optional step input digital filter. When J6 jumper 1-2 is installed (factory default), the filter is enabled, and the minimum width requirement for step pulses is 1 microsecond. Narrow pulses with a width less than 0.5 microseconds will be filtered out, and the maximum step frequency at this time is 500kHz. When the filter is disabled, the minimum pulse width drops to 0.25 microseconds and the maximum step frequency can reach 2MHz. Users can flexibly choose according to the on-site electromagnetic environment and controller output capability.