Academic Company Events NI Developer Zone Support Solutions Products & Services Contact NI MyNI

Document Type: Tutorial
NI Supported: Yes
Publish Date: Jul 1, 2008

Connecting an R-Series Device to a MID-765x Drive for Servo Motor Control

7 ratings | 3.71 out of 5
Print

Overview

If you use NI SoftMotion with a PCI/PXI-783xR reconfigurable I/O (RIO) board to control a servo motor, you will need an external power drive. This document describes how to connect the 7831R to a MID-765x servo motor drive using encoder feedback for closed loop control.

Background

The NI SoftMotion Development Module for LabVIEW 7.1 ships with tools and example software for controlling motion via M Series DAQ devices and FPGA devices such as cRIO and the 783xR series I/O boards for PCI and PXI.

This document provides the information you will need for physically wiring a 783xR to a MID-765x servo motor power drive. This information is also useful as a starting point for understanding how to connect the other I/O devices listed above to the MID-765x or third party power drives.

Servo power drives require an analog control input, so this document does not apply to those 783xR devices that only have digital I/O.

Connecting the 783xR to the MID-765x power drive


The MID-765x power drive connector is designed to be pin compatible with NI-73xx motion control boards, so you can get a pinout listing by looking at the "Signal Connections" chapter of the NI-7350 User Manual. Similarly, the 783xR series pinouts are available in the NI783xR User Manual. Both manuals can be downloaded or viewed from www.ni.com/manuals.

The LabVIEW 7.1 SoftMotion example for reconfigurable I/O (Typically found at C:\Program Files\National Instruments\LabVIEW 7.1\examples\Motion\SoftMotion\RIO) require three signals per axis (AO control and encoder A/B feedback) and three common connections (AO ground, Digital ground, and +5 V) to connect the 783xR to each axis of a power drive.

For single axis applications, the MID-765x signals can be connected to the 783x as follows:


[+] Enlarge Image

The +5V connection is used as an interlock signal that disables the power drive in the event that the cable is disconnected.

The shipping examples do no provide axis inhibit control, which is optional for MID drives. Inhibit funcionality can be easily implemented using a spare DIO line as shown above.

To control additional axes, simply connect additional 783xR AO and DIO signals to the MID drive analog output, encoder, and inhibit signals. The MID pinouts can be found in the Signal Connections chapter of the NI 7350 user manual (a link is provided below).

To make the physical connections easier to wire up, you can use a pair of SCB-68 terminal blocks and the following cables:


See Also:
NI-7350 User Manual


7 ratings | 3.71 out of 5
Print

Reader Comments | Submit a comment »

 

Legal
This tutorial (this "tutorial") was developed by National Instruments ("NI"). Although technical support of this tutorial may be made available by National Instruments, the content in this tutorial may not be completely tested and verified, and NI does not guarantee its quality in any way or that NI will continue to support this content with each new revision of related products and drivers. THIS TUTORIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND AND SUBJECT TO CERTAIN RESTRICTIONS AS MORE SPECIFICALLY SET FORTH IN NI.COM'S TERMS OF USE (http://ni.com/legal/termsofuse/unitedstates/us/).