Sizing Winder Applications: The Need for an Accurate Model
Most
sizing tools assume the winder is full of material at the maximum
radius. When winding, this is the worst case scenario for decelerating
the maximum inertia. In winding applications, most often the goal
is to maintain a certain web tension at a constant linear speed.
If the empty radius is say 25% of the full radius, then the motor
and gearbox speeds can be up to 4x faster during acceleration than
deceleration. This can lead to a motor and gearbox selection error
by not accounting for the much faster motor and gearbox speeds during
the acceleration phase.
Consider a winding application as shown in Figure
1 where the roller radius is 100mm, and when full
of material, the effective radius grows to 400mm. The material speed
is 5m/s, and the web tension is 50N. The gearbox ratio is 10:1.
Figure 2 illustrates
the accurate dynamic model of the entire winding sequence:
The top two profiles are the material linear velocity and length
of wound material
The middle two profiles are the effective radius and the load
inertia
The bottom two profiles are the motor speed and motor torque
At the start of acceleration, the roller is without
material. The effective radius is only the roller radius, and the
load inertia is small. Therefore, the motor speed ramps up to 4,360rpm
to achieve the 5m/s material linear speed. As the winder fills with
material, the radius inceases and the motor speed gradually decreases
to maintain the material linear speed of 5m/s. As the deceleration
segment begins, the motor speed is 1,200rpm.
Figure 2: Winder Sequence
Figure 3
illustrates how the winder sequence translates to motor torque and
speed. During acceleration (green segment), motor speed is the key
design consideration. However, during deceleration (red segment),
the motor torque is the key design consideration.
Figure 3: Motor Torque vs Speed
Finally, for unwinding applications, the same issues
occur, just in reverse. During acceleration, motor torque is a key
design consideration. During deceleration, motor speed is an important
design consideration.
The main point here is that an accurate winder
model makes it easy for engineers to make smart design decisions
for motor and gearbox selection based on the entire winder sequence.
The engineer can study any portion of the profile, and then choose
to adjust the profile, change the gearbox or choose a different
motor. The model is performing all the detailed calculations, and
the designer can easily evaluate numerous options depending on the
design objectives.