d123
Advanced Member level 5
Hi,
I'm beginning to (want to) get lost.
You ask about a FOUR-WIRE generic (bipolar?) stepper motor, then insist on breadboard photos of a six-wire motor (Why? e.g. ...My left hand hurts, so here's a photo of my right hand. Please diagnose my injury.) and using methods related to a SIX-WIRE motor with CONTROL WIRES. CHEAP BIPOLAR STEPPERS only have wires for the two coils and clearly won't work the same way. What's so hard to absorb about six not being the same as four? Would it make any sense trying to drive a 2-input NAND gate the same as a 3-input AND gate and expect the same output for presumably the same input combinations?
If you haven't already, which I guess you have..., try 5V for everything and driving the wires via the LM293 and using e.g. pushbuttons to experimentally control the sequence to find what works and what doesn't. Slow-motion manual troubleshooting may help more than wiring it all up with inappropriate code.
A 5V bipolar 4-wire stepper motor I have is weak, it's really a "toy", I can move the shaft when it isn't connected, too, and probably when it's connected.
Have you measured the current going into the motor coils when it gets very hot? That would tell you a lot about what's happening there. The one I have is: 5V, 125mA, 40R in case that helps as a rough guide to work up or down from and see if the heat lessens.
In the end, I didn't understand. Has it got two coils that can be clearly identified by two approximately equal resistance values, or not, and if not, what seems connected to what internally?
Failing any other solutions - when it gets hot, spray it with iced water. Just kidding .
I'm beginning to (want to) get lost.
You ask about a FOUR-WIRE generic (bipolar?) stepper motor, then insist on breadboard photos of a six-wire motor (Why? e.g. ...My left hand hurts, so here's a photo of my right hand. Please diagnose my injury.) and using methods related to a SIX-WIRE motor with CONTROL WIRES. CHEAP BIPOLAR STEPPERS only have wires for the two coils and clearly won't work the same way. What's so hard to absorb about six not being the same as four? Would it make any sense trying to drive a 2-input NAND gate the same as a 3-input AND gate and expect the same output for presumably the same input combinations?
If you haven't already, which I guess you have..., try 5V for everything and driving the wires via the LM293 and using e.g. pushbuttons to experimentally control the sequence to find what works and what doesn't. Slow-motion manual troubleshooting may help more than wiring it all up with inappropriate code.
A 5V bipolar 4-wire stepper motor I have is weak, it's really a "toy", I can move the shaft when it isn't connected, too, and probably when it's connected.
Have you measured the current going into the motor coils when it gets very hot? That would tell you a lot about what's happening there. The one I have is: 5V, 125mA, 40R in case that helps as a rough guide to work up or down from and see if the heat lessens.
In the end, I didn't understand. Has it got two coils that can be clearly identified by two approximately equal resistance values, or not, and if not, what seems connected to what internally?
Failing any other solutions - when it gets hot, spray it with iced water. Just kidding .