Product Series Overview
In the field of modern industrial automation, the performance, reliability, and integration of single axis motion control systems often directly affect the operational efficiency and development cycle of the entire equipment. The ZETA6000 series drive controller is an integrated single axis solution designed to meet this demand. This series integrates the controller and driver into the same compact package, retaining the powerful instruction set of the 6000 series controller while incorporating the advanced micro stepping technology of the ZETA series stepper driver, making it particularly suitable for single axis applications that require high-precision positioning, smooth motion, and fast response.
The ZETA6000 series includes four power versions to adapt to different loads and voltage environments: ZETA6104, ZETA6104-240, ZETA6108, and ZETA6112. Among them, ZETA6104 is suitable for 120VAC power supply environment and can provide 0-4 ampere peak current; ZETA6108 provides 0-8 ampere output capability; ZETA6112 is designed for situations that require greater torque and supports peak currents of 0-12 amperes; The ZETA6104-240 adopts a wide voltage input design (95-264VAC), which can automatically adapt to 120VAC or 240VAC power supply, generating 170VDC or 340VDC bus voltage respectively. This flexible power grading enables the ZETA6000 series to drive a wide range of loads, from small stepper motors to medium-sized industrial stepper motors.
Core driving technology: active damping and electronic viscosity
The most prominent technological highlight of the ZETA6000 series is its integrated Active Damping ™) Electronic Viscosity ™) Two patented technologies. Traditional stepper motor drive systems often experience vibration, noise, and torque drop during high-speed operation, mainly due to the inherent back electromotive force of the motor and system resonance. Active damping technology increases the damping ratio of the system to 0.5 by detecting the back electromotive force of the motor in real time and applying appropriate damping current, which is much higher than the level of 0.1-0.2 in conventional stepper systems. This breakthrough brings four advantages: firstly, the motor can still maintain stability under high acceleration conditions, effectively suppressing vibration in the medium and high speed sections; Secondly, due to reduced vibration, the motor rotor can more efficiently convert input electrical energy into mechanical shaft power, resulting in a significant increase in output torque at the same current; Thirdly, lower vibration means smaller mechanical wear and smoother motion trajectories, especially suitable for precision machining applications with strict requirements for surface smoothness; Fourthly, active damping allows the system to adopt higher acceleration values than traditional solutions, thereby shortening the positioning time.
Complementary to active damping is electronic viscosity technology. This technology mainly targets the "crawling" phenomenon in low-speed motion and the residual oscillation problem after positioning. When traditional stepper systems operate at extremely low speeds, significant speed ripples are generated due to the discreteness of the step angle, while electronic viscosity constructs electrical characteristics similar to viscous dampers in the motor winding by finely adjusting the current waveform and phase. The actual effect is as follows: the tuning time of the system after reaching the target position is significantly reduced, and the positioning jitter in typical applications can be reduced by more than 50%; At the same time, within the ultra-low speed range of several tens of revolutions per minute, the speed fluctuation amplitude is suppressed to a level close to that of the servo motor. In addition, due to the optimization of current waveform, the electromagnetic noise emitted by the motor at rest or low speed is significantly reduced, which is particularly important for applications such as medical equipment and laboratory instruments that are sensitive to environmental noise.
Complete protection circuit and reliability design
Electrical and thermal stresses in industrial environments are common failure factors for drivers, and the ZETA6000 series has designed multi-layer protection mechanisms for this purpose. In terms of short circuit protection, the driver can monitor the phase to phase short circuit and any relative to ground short circuit between the motor windings in real time. Once abnormal current is detected, the driver stage will immediately turn off the output and report the fault to prevent damage to the power transistor. For power fluctuations, the system has built-in undervoltage protection (Brownout). When the AC input drops below 85VAC, the driver automatically enters a protective state to avoid abnormal behavior caused by insufficient power supply. The ZETA6000 series is equipped with overvoltage protection circuit and power dump circuit to address the common issue of regenerative energy in stepper systems, where mechanical energy is converted into electrical energy during motor deceleration and fed back to the bus capacitor, resulting in voltage rise. When the bus voltage exceeds the safety threshold, the discharge resistor will automatically activate, converting excess electrical energy into heat energy and consuming it, thereby protecting the driver and power module from breakdown. In addition, there is a temperature sensor inside the drive. When the temperature of the power device or power supply reaches 55 ° C (113 ° F), the system will trigger an overheat shutdown fault, which can resume operation after the temperature drops. This series of protection mechanisms enables the ZETA6000 series to withstand harsh operating conditions of continuous full load operation.