Currently with the 10hp idler and the Samson lathe running as a second 
idler and the 611 in the BP 308 on I have the voltage balanced at 245 
between all three phases give or take one volt. The VMC will make parts 
and run at 2k with full rapid speeds or ramp up with G code to 6k and 
run about an hour or so before the drive trips out. Turning off 
everything for a while and whatever caused the trip seems to mend 
itself. So now I'm thinking that there might be an actual problem in the 
infeed unit because once it starts to trip out if I reset the machine 
and start running again it trips out real fast.

Monitoring the generated phase voltage while running and during rapid 
moves of Z I see no more than one volt variation. So that seems pretty 
stiff to me.

The spindle and axes are all Siemens AC servos. If I changed to a VFD 
then I would loose my tool changer which would suck. I'd be more 
inclined to buy another VMC that didn't have a Siemens Simodrive 611 
than try and mod this one, then sell the Discovery 308 on flea bay. The 
sad part is I have more $ invested in BT30 tooling than I care to think 
about so that clouds the issue of getting rid of the 308 for another VMC.

I plan on calling Siemens back to see if there is anything I might do to 
reduce the sensitivity of the drive. The one thing that sticks in the 
back of my mind is how crappy the wave form was when I removed the 
commutating reactor from the circuit... anyway a lot to wonder about.

Thanks
John

On 6/2/2012 1:50 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
> gene heskett wrote:
>>
>> Well, at some point it should become a discussion where the cost of
>> switching the drives out for something that can tolerate a softer regulated
>> power supply source is becoming one possible solution.
> Well, this seems premature.  This machine ALMOST works.  I have not
> looked at the
> docs link that John posted, so I don't know how much detail is there on
> the fault logic.
> There may be a couple ways to attack this, but it would help to know
> what fault is
> being sensed.  If there is a phase fault sensor, I might just hot-wire
> it out.  if there
> is a DC bus low sensor, I might see about changing a resistor or
> adjustment to make
> it a little less sensitive.  Also, possibly, increase the size of the
> filter cap bank a
> bit to make it dip less.
>
> What is the spindle motor (AC, DC)?  Is it controlled by an analog 10 V
> command?
> Would it be possible to run the spindle off a conventional VFD or DC
> drive, and
> separate it from the servo axis drives?
>
> Jon
>
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