Motors & Drives 101

Motors & Drives 101 — Servo, BLDC, Synchronous & Asynchronous

A quick, practical guide to picking the right motor and drive. Learn how servo vs. BLDC vs. AC (synchronous & asynchronous) compare, what a drive actually does, and how controls (I/O, fieldbus, safety) tie it all together.

Overview

Servo Motor (PM AC Servo)

Permanent-magnet synchronous motor with high-resolution feedback and a **servo drive**. Delivers **precise position, speed, and torque** with high dynamics.

Highest accuracyClosed loopEtherCAT/EIP/PN
[Drive] ⇄ [Encoder/Resolver]
   │            ↑ feedback
   └── 3ϕ PWM → Servo Motor (PM)
          

Brushless DC (BLDC)

Electronically commutated **DC** motor. Uses **Hall sensors** for simple control; add an encoder for closed-loop positioning. Great efficiency & power density.

24–60 VDCCompactHigh efficiency
[BLDC Drive] → 3-phase inverter → BLDC
Hall sensors → basic commutation
+ Encoder → precise control
          

Synchronous AC (PM AC)

Electrically the same machine as a servo motor, but run with lower feedback resolution or simpler control when **full servo features** aren’t required.

High efficiencyFixed speed with VFD

Asynchronous AC (Induction)

Workhorse **induction** motor driven by a **VFD**. Ideal for **speed control** and rugged duty. Add encoder/vector control for basic positioning.

IEC/NEMA framesCost-effectiveVFD

Compare Motor Technologies

Criteria Servo (PM) BLDC Synchronous AC Asynchronous AC (Induction)
Control & feedback Servo drive + high-res encoder/absolute Halls (basic) · Encoder (closed-loop) VFD/servo-class drive · optional encoder VFD (scalar/vector) · optional encoder
Precision / dynamics Highest—camming, contouring, robotics Good—applications needing compact power Good—fixed speed or basic closed loop Low for position; excellent for speed control
Voltage 200/400/480 VAC 24–60 VDC 230/400/480 VAC 120/230/480 VAC
Best for Precision motion, indexing, multi-axis Mobile/compact drives, pumps, fans, AGV High-efficiency constant speed / sync apps Conveyors, pumps, fans, general purpose
Pros High accuracy, torque density, bandwidth Efficient, compact, low voltage options High efficiency, smooth, simple VFD control Rugged, low cost, widely available
Considerations Higher cost; tuning; feedback alignment EMI, need encoder for precision, gear options Less dynamic than full servo Positioning needs encoder/vector; low torque density

Drives & Controls

Servo Drives

  • Position/velocity/torque modes; camming & gearing.
  • Fieldbuses: EtherCAT, EtherNet/IP, PROFINET.
  • Safety: STO, and options like SLS, SSM, SS1/2.

VFDs (AC Drives)

  • Scalar (V/f) for simple speed; **vector** for torque control.
  • Encoder feedback enables basic positioning / tension.
  • Harmonics, braking chopper/resistor sizing.

Controllers & I/O

  • PLC/PAC or motion controller issues trajectories.
  • I/O: home/limits, enable, E-Stop, safety relays.
  • HMI/SCADA for recipes, trends, and alarms.
Rule of thumb: start from the mechanics and throughput → compute force/speed/accel → choose motor/gear → size the drive → confirm power, safety, and fieldbus.

Selection Tips

Key Inputs

  • Load, move profile (distance, time, dwell), duty cycle
  • Required accuracy & repeatability
  • Environment (IP rating, temperature, washdown, EMI)
  • Power available (VAC/VDC), fieldbus, safety requirements

Quick Choices

  • High precision / dynamic: Servo (PM) + encoder
  • Long travel / high speed: Belt + servo or induction + VFD
  • Low-voltage compact: BLDC drive + encoder
  • Rugged speed control: Induction + VFD

FAQ

Is a servo motor the same as a synchronous motor?
A modern AC servo is a **permanent-magnet synchronous motor** paired with a high-performance servo drive and high-resolution feedback. All servos are synchronous, but not all synchronous motors are equipped or tuned as servos.
When is BLDC better than a servo?
For **low-voltage**, compact systems (AGV/AMR, pumps, fans) where you need efficiency and speed control, BLDC is ideal. Add an **encoder** if you need precise positioning.
Can an induction motor do positioning?
Yes—use a **vector VFD** with an encoder (closed loop). It won’t match servo dynamics, but it’s good for **indexing**, winding, and tension control at lower cost.
What feedback should I choose?
For servos: **absolute encoders** (BiSS/EnDat) simplify homing. For BLDC/induction: a **quadrature encoder** is common. Resolver is rugged but lower resolution.

Glossary

Servo

Closed-loop system (motor + drive + feedback) that controls position, speed, or torque precisely.

BLDC

Brushless DC motor; electronic commutation via hall sensors/encoder; efficient and compact.

Synchronous

Rotor speed is locked to stator field frequency (often permanent-magnet).

Asynchronous

Induction motor; rotor lags stator field (slip). Simple and rugged.

Vector Control

Drive algorithm that controls torque-producing current components, enabling higher performance.

STO

Safe Torque Off: a safety function that removes energy to the motor without removing main power.
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