I think that what you have is a magnetoresistive gear tooth sensor. If it were a hall effect sensor, it would have more than two leads.
Try putting an ohmmeter across it. If you get a reading, see if it varies in the presence of a magnet or ferrous material. If it does, you can select a load resistor accordingly. The 1k and 330 ohm resistors near Q1 function as a load in your schematic.
You will definitely need a load resistor, but you will need a decoupling capacitor only if DC bias prevents you from reading the signal.
On 5/1/2013 11:59 AM, William Gilmore wrote:
I'm trying to figure out the spindle speed sensor on an 80s cnc mill. In another drawing it's referred to as a proximity probe. In the attached drawing it's on the left size with the BRN and BLU wires. In the head of the mill the probe reads a toothed wheel.
To my untrained eye it looks like the BRN wire gets +9V and the BLU wire is the signal. Put 9 volts to the wire and see what happens? I don't want to fry this thing as it's nicely integrated in to the machine.
The controller I'm using can take 4-24V inputs so I think if I can get a pulsing signal from the sensor I can take it from there. Do I need the decoupling cap?
Thanks.
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Put ohmmeter across the wires and turned the spindle by hand. Constant OL (open circuit). I found this : http://pewa.panasonic.com/news/e-news/article/sunx-two-wire-inductive-proximity-sensors%3A-the-universal-donor which has the same wire colors and suggests that it would need power to work. Should I recreate the circuit from the original drawing?
On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 2:07 PM, Dan Lavin <dan...@verizon.net> wrote:
I think that what you have is a magnetoresistive gear tooth sensor. If it were a hall effect sensor, it would have more than two leads.
Try putting an ohmmeter across it. If you get a reading, see if it varies in the presence of a magnet or ferrous material. If it does, you can select a load resistor accordingly. The 1k and 330 ohm resistors near Q1 function as a load in your schematic.
You will definitely need a load resistor, but you will need a decoupling capacitor only if DC bias prevents you from reading the signal.
On 5/1/2013 11:59 AM, William Gilmore wrote:
I'm trying to figure out the spindle speed sensor on an 80s cnc mill. In another drawing it's referred to as a proximity probe. In the attached drawing it's on the left size with the BRN and BLU wires. In the head of the mill the probe reads a toothed wheel.
To my untrained eye it looks like the BRN wire gets +9V and the BLU wire is the signal. Put 9 volts to the wire and see what happens? I don't want to fry this thing as it's nicely integrated in to the machine.
The controller I'm using can take 4-24V inputs so I think if I can get a pulsing signal from the sensor I can take it from there. Do I need the decoupling cap?
Thanks.
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