Back to all FAQs

question

When troubleshooting intermittent servo drive faults that don't reproduce during testing, what advanced diagnostic techniques beyond basic error code checking do experienced technicians use to catch these elusive gremlins?

answer

I know how frustrating it can be when servo drives act up intermittently - they work fine during testing but fail randomly during operation. Experienced technicians use several advanced diagnostic techniques to catch these elusive gremlins:

• Oscilloscope analysis: They capture real-time electrical signals to spot transient spikes, noise interference, or timing issues that basic error codes miss

• Thermal imaging: Using FLIR cameras to detect overheating components that only fail under specific thermal conditions

• Vibration analysis: Identifying mechanical issues like bearing wear or resonance that cause intermittent electrical faults

• PLC logic analysis: Examining auto-sequencing and homing routines for timing conflicts or sensor signal issues

• Drive diagnostic software: Using manufacturer-specific tools to monitor parameters and feedback loops in real-time

• Load simulation: Recreating actual operating conditions rather than just no-load testing

The key is combining multiple techniques since intermittent faults often result from complex interactions between electrical, mechanical, and control system components.

Recent Q&A

Quickly browse the latest questions and answers

Contact form