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0.9 vs 1.8 Degree Step Angle Stepper Motor

Over the years there have been discussions about the 1.8 degree step angle versus 0.9 degree stepper motor. Most stepper motors today have the standard step angle of 1.8 degrees, resulting in a 200 step per revolution. However, in the early days of stepper motors, before microstepping, low end resonance played a significant role in many applications. Most application engineers suggested either increasing the load, to lower the bandwidth frequency, or simply avoiding this low end resonance region altogether.

For some stepper motor designs the idea of a smaller step angle was created to lessen the ringing around each tooth. The result was a mechanical change, which reduced the step angle from 1.8 degree to 0.9 degree resulting in a 400 steps per revolution stepper motor.

This did reduce the ringing and in some cases allowed for smoother operation accelerating through the low end resonance region. However, the reduction to such a small step angle resulted in higher saturation of the lamination steel around the tooth. This resulted in lower torque due to the core losses. As the current increased, the losses became more significant and the anticipated gains lost due to saturation.

A 0.9 Degree Step Angle A 1.8 degree step angle
0.9 Degree Step Angle 1.8 Degree Step Angle

In the early years, most of the motors utilizing this 0.9 step angle were Nema 23 or single stack Nema 34 frame motors, which had lower currents. The lower currents produced lower saturation in the steel laminations and therefore were successful in some applications.

While there is still a place for 0.9 degree step angle steppers, the introduction of microstepping and the expanded higher end filtering of today’s stepper drives, low end resonance found in 1.8 degree steppers can be successfully accelerated through and perform within this region.