Hi Alan that's very strange... When I used stepper motors in the past I just used them with rated voltage and current and had no problems... I am talking of unipolar motors. regards Luis -----Original Message----- From: Alan B. Pearce [mailto:A.B.Pearce@RL.AC.UK] Sent: 27 February 2004 17:16 To: PICLIST@mitvma.mit.edu Subject: Re: ] Stepper motor voltage question >I built a desktop milling machine a couple of years ago. It used >5v rated steppers, so I hooked them up to 5volts. I got no torque >out of them at all. That would be correct. >Called the guy I bought them from, and he said that, though rated >for 5volts, steppers need at least 4 to 6 times the rated voltage >to work properly. The 5V rating is what you would use to supply enough current for them to hold position. This limits the coil current to a value that limits heat dissipation. >I run my mill on 24volts. Has plenty of torque, and have never >had a problem with any of the motors. That would be a typical voltage to get the current to increase at sufficient rate while stepping. However if leaving a motor stopped for a while at this voltage you will find the motor will get very hot, possibly damaging winding insulation. The way I have seen this sorted is to use a switchmode regulator chip with a "change voltage" control done by an external transistor changing the sense divider ratio. When the control processor wants to move the motor it switches to high voltage, waits a few milliseconds then starts stepping the motor. A few milliseconds after finishing the motion the voltage is switched back to the holding voltage. -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics (like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details.