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Pololu item #:
2967
Brand:
Pololu
Status:
Active and Preferred
This version of our MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier with Potentiometer Current Control ships with male header pins installed, so no soldering is required to use it with an appropriate 16-pin socket or solderless breadboard. Please see the MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control product page for more information about the driver.
Alternatives available with variations in these parameter(s): current limit control header pins soldered? Select variant…
Compare all products in MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carriers or 16-pin Stepper Motor Drivers.
MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control with header pins soldered. |
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MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control, top view. |
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MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, bottom view. |
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Minimal wiring diagram for connecting a microcontroller to an MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control (full-step mode). |
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Alternative minimal wiring diagram for connecting a microcontroller to an MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control (full-step mode). |
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Current limit vs. potentiometer setting for the MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control. |
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Schematic diagram for the MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier. |
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Schematic of nSLEEP and nFAULT pins on MP6500 carrier. |
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This version of our MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier with Potentiometer Current Control ships with male header pins installed as shown in the main product picture, so no soldering is required to use it with an appropriate 16-pin socket or solderless breadboard. Please see the MP6500 Stepper Motor Driver Carrier, Potentiometer Current Control product page for more information about the driver.
Size: | 0.6″ × 0.8″ |
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Weight: | 2.5 g |
Minimum operating voltage: | 4.5 V |
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Maximum operating voltage: | 35 V |
Continuous current per phase: | 1.5 A1 |
Maximum current per phase: | 2.5 A2 |
Minimum logic voltage: | 2.1 V3 |
Maximum logic voltage: | 6 V4 |
Microstep resolutions: | full, 1/2, 1/4, and 1/8 |
Current limit control: | potentiometer |
Reverse voltage protection?: | N |
Header pins soldered?: | Y |
PCB dev codes: | md33a, md33b |
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Other PCB markings: | 0J10855, 0J11019 |
This DXF drawing shows the locations of all of the board’s holes.
Yes. To avoid damaging your stepper motor, you want to avoid exceeding the rated current, which is 600 mA in this instance. All of our stepper motor drivers let you limit the maximum current, so as long as you set the limit below the rated current, you will be within spec for your motor, even if the voltage exceeds the rated voltage. The voltage rating is just the voltage at which each coil draws the rated current, so the coils of your stepper motor will draw 600 mA at 3.9 V. By using a higher voltage along with active current limiting, the current is able to ramp up faster, which lets you achieve higher step rates than you could using the rated voltage.
If you do want to use a lower motor supply voltage for other reasons, consider using our DRV8834 or STSPIN-220 low-voltage stepper motor drivers.
Yes, you do! Setting the current limit on your stepper motor driver carrier is essential to making sure that it runs properly. An appropriate current limit also ensures that your motor is not allowed to draw more current than it or your driver can handle, since that is likely to damage one or both of them.
For the MP6500 with digital current control, the details for setting the current limit can be found in the product description.
For the MP6500 with potentiometer current control, the current limit is set by adjusting its potentiometer. We strongly recommend using a multimeter to measure the VREF voltage while setting the current limit so you can be sure you set it to an appropriate value (just turning the pot randomly until things seem to work is not a good approach). The following video has more details on setting the current limit:
Measuring the current draw at the power supply does not necessarily provide an accurate measure of the coil current. Since the input voltage to the driver can be significantly higher than the coil voltage, the measured current on the power supply can be quite a bit lower than the coil current (the driver and coil basically act like a switching step-down power supply). Also, if the supply voltage is very high compared to what the motor needs to achieve the set current, the duty cycle will be very low, which also leads to significant differences between average and RMS currents: RMS current is what is relevant for power dissipation in the chip but many power supplies won’t show that. You should base your assessment of the coil current on the set current limit or by measuring the actual coil currents.
Please note that while the MP6500 driver is rated for up to 2.5 A (peak) per coil, the carrier by itself will overheat at lower currents. We have found that it generally requires a heat sink to deliver more than approximately 1.5 A per coil, but this number depends on factors such as ambient temperature and air flow. For example, sealing three MP6500 driver carriers in close proximity in a small box will cause them to overheat at lower currents than a unit by itself in open air.
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