I stumbled upon this document.  Might be helpful.  I'm surprised that 
you don't go into information overload trying to figure this stuff out.

http://www.mitchell-electronics.com/downloads/Catalog_PriceList/TI5000EXManual.pdf

http://www.mitchell-electronics.com/downloads/Catalog_PriceList/Price%20List%20by%20Part%20Number.pdf

Apparently they make encoder test systems.   I sure could have used one 
of these the other day as we found a bad Heidenhain encoder on a new 
motor but only after a lot of swapping of parts and wasting a lot of  time.
I think the encoder was zapped when they miss-wired the 24 volt supply 
into some of the encoder data lines.

These guys must know the ins and outs of the Fanuc encoders.   Perhaps 
they would talk to you??   Might be worth a shot if you explain that you 
are not a competitor.

Dave


On 5/1/2011 11:53 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
> Dave wrote:
>    
>>> There is likely a command that you can send to the encoder to zero or
>>> preset the encoder.  Some systems call that a passive homing routine.
>>>
>>>        
> Yes, that seems very reasonable, but I have no idea how to find out what
> code to send to the encoder to make it home on index.  It was hard
> enough to figure out how to make it report the position.
>    
>>> Absolute encoder systems can be really handy on machines that are
>>> difficult to home with a conventional home switch search.
>>>
>>>        
> I can see this on robots, but it doesn't seem all that big a deal on
> conventional machine tools.
>    
>>> If the encoder always knows where the rotor is at (since the encoder is
>>> absolute), isn't commutation pretty simple after the initial angle
>>> setting of the rotor position?
>>>
>>>        
> Well, I'd like to skip the battery if I could.  But, if the encoder has
> no idea where it is, and just calls the location on power-up zero, then
> commutation is NOT simple.  Apparently, it may provide the 4-bit Gray
> code commutation that has been used on earlier Fanuc brushless encoders
> in that state.  That would at least allow the motor to operate.  Then,
> it may send some useful signal when it passes the index position.  But,
> if the encoder is only sampled once per ms, the "index has been seen"
> indication is not very precise.  Hopefully, Fanuc does something more
> intelligent with it.
>
> Jon
>
>
>    


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