Loadpoint’s direct drive rotary tables are the first for precision tasks with angular position resolution better than 0.00002°

Assembly Automation

ISSN: 0144-5154

Article publication date: 1 June 2003

102

Keywords

Citation

(2003), "Loadpoint’s direct drive rotary tables are the first for precision tasks with angular position resolution better than 0.00002°", Assembly Automation, Vol. 23 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/aa.2003.03323bad.002

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited


Loadpoint’s direct drive rotary tables are the first for precision tasks with angular position resolution better than 0.00002°

Loadpoint’s direct drive rotary tables are the first for precision tasks with angular position resolution better than 0.00002°

Keyword: Bearings

Loadpoint Bearings has launched a revolutionary range of air bearing rotary tables employing a new design of direct drive system to achieve previously unattainable levels of resolution on angular position, better than 0.00002° (Plate 2). This level of accuracy means that the rotary tables are ideally suited to demanding tasks such as dicing silicon wafers and high precision grinding and machining operations.

Plate 2 Loadpoint’s direct drive rotary tables are the first for precision tasks with angular position resolution better than 0.00002°

Developed originally for Loadpoint’s own use – and proven in trials on the company’s own dicing machines – the rotary tables are believed to be the first commercially available product of their type to integrate a direct drive motor. The motor itself – a brushless DC torque unit – is a very recent development. It is key to the air bearing table specification, enabling a design, which is low in height and free from cyclic errors and mechanical wear.

The new design resolves a host of issues associated with mechanically driven air bearing tables. Traditionally, the drive on these units has been provided by such devices as worm and wheel, pinch wheel, cable or harmonic drives. Each has associated disadvantages, the harmonic drive is physically large and has limited resolution on angular position whereas the others produce cyclic errors and are prone to wear, both of which impair operating accuracy.

The Loadpoint design overcomes all of these problems, achieving a resolution on angular position better than 0.00002° (a parameter which is critically important on large diameter rotary tables) and axial and tilt motion errors of less than 0.25 mm and 0.013 mrad, respectively. The system resolution achieved is a function of the encoder type and the interpolation of its signal by the drive. A wide choice of encoder types offering different levels of resolution means that the user has considerable application flexibility in this respect.

Loadpoint is producing the new rotary tables in a range of sizes up to a maximum diameter of 0.5 m. These can be with or without drives to suit different application requirements. A typical specification is shown in Plate 2. The table, 320 mm in diameter, is currently used to support silicon wafers for dicing. It has an axial stiffness of 100 Nmm, a load capacity of 1,350 N and can generate 75 Nm peak, 6.5 Nm continuous torque.

For further information contact: Frank Wardle, Loadpoint Limited Chelworth Industrial Estate, Cricklade, Swindon, Wiltshire, SN6 6HE, UK. Tel: 01793 751160; Fax: 01793 750155; E-mail: all@loadpoint.co.uk; Web site: www.loadpoint.co.uk

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