Fundamentals of Numerical Control
Fundamentals of Numerical Control
NUMERICAL CONTROL
HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
• 15th century - machining metal.
• 18th century - industrialization, production-type machine tools.
• 20th century - F.W. Taylor - tool metal - HSS
Automated production equipment -
Screw machines
Transfer lines
Assembly lines
...
using cams and preset stops
Programmable automation -
NC
PLC
Robots
A 3-AXIS MACHINING CENTER
HEXAPOD 6-AXIS MACHINES
• Tool changers
CLU - Control-loops unit
• Pallet changers
• On-machine programming DPU - Data processing
unit
• Data communication
• Graphical interface
Machine
MCU Tool
CLU
DPU
NC MOTION-CONTROL
N C Pr o g r a m
Ex e c u t io n
Sy s t e m
D im e n s io n s Co m m a n d s
In t e r p o la t o r & T r an slat o r
Se r v o - c o n t r o l
M e c h a n is m
Co n t r o l L o g ic Po w e r Re la y
L in e a r M o t io n So le n o id
NC MACHINE CLASSIFICATIONS
1. Motion control: point to point (PTP)
and continuous (contouring) path
2. Control loops: open loop and closed loop
3. Power drives: hydraulic, electric,
or pneumatic
4. Positioning systems: incremental and
absolute positioning
5. Hardwired NC and softwired Computer
Numerical Control (CNC)
POINT TO POINT
• Moving at maximum rate from point to point.
• Precise control.
Linear
ways
Bearing
Leadscrew
TOOL CHANGE
Spindle Tool
with a tool
Tool change
arm
5-AXIS MACHINE
Tool
Workpiece
NC MACHINE RATING
Accuracy
Repeatability
Spindle and axis motor horsepower
Number of controlled axes
Dimension of workspace
Features of the machine and the controller.
NC ACCURACY AND REPEATABILITY
Disadvantages:
Loss of synchronization at certain operating range.
SERVO MOTORS
Motor controlled using a feedback mechanism. A
transducer feedback and a speed control forms a
servo loop.
Carbon
+
brushe
_
DC: speed controlled by voltage
A DC permanent magnet motor
AC: speed controlled by frequency
Feedback
Shaft
Tacho- DC
meter Motor
Rotor
S
COMMUTATORS
Six
commutator
bars for three
sets of coils.
Brush
Coils
BUILD YOUR OWN MOTOR
Following is a motor with one coil winding (Figure 1). It needs a gentle
push to start the rotation.
Use coated transformer wire to loop around a AA battery about 10 times.
Leave 2” leads on either end. Use scotch tape to keep the loop together.
It is important that the leads come out of the center of the loop (see
figure 2), so the rotor will be balanced.
The coil is turned on for half of the rotation (see figure 3)
Remove
coating Sand away
completely only the
Permanent top half of
AA battery magnet on this end
of the lead. the
coating.
Rotor coil
Figure 2
M.K Herliansyah