One thing more about quality stepper motors. I have a very heavy duty LASER engraver, manufactured in the USA.
When I bought it, it was almost twice the cost of the competition, but the quality of the electronic controlling software and hardware and stepper motors, is something else. That machine, is the best thing I have ever purchased to make money with.
After reading the latest additions to the thread and also from following it from day one, I have some food for thought.
I just did some back of the envelope calculations regarding the stepper motors in my machine, which has three stepper motors. The absolute minimum annual directional changes the least used stepper motor does, is approximately 1,036,800 in a calender year.
This machine is almost 15 years old and I have replaced the wiring looms twice on this stepper motor in this time frame, but the motor itself, just keeps on running. By the way the accuracy this motor steps to is 1/300th of an inch for about 80% of the work, and 1/600th of an inch for the other 20%.
When doing circular cuts the motors turn the bed and cutting head arrangement at a speed, which interestingly, is about the speed of the 2500 Jobo drums. This was something I had thought about if the LASER machine broke down totally.
The varied opposition manufacturers to this machine in it's day, are virtually dead and buried. Essentially the early LASER machines ran cheap stepper motors, mine were sourced from about the best the USA could produce.
Whilst a lot of people around the world, myself included, often rubbish the quality of a lot of American stuff, when they build really good stuff, nothing beats them. They may equal them, but I rarely have heard of them being beaten.
I would humbly suggest that once you have a prototype up and running and know where you are heading, then quality stepper motors will be running easily, day in, day out, decade in, decade out.
Mick.