Motors 101 — Selection Guide
Motors convert electrical energy into motion. Choosing the right type comes down to control method, torque/speed profile, precision, and budget. Use this page as a quick lesson and a practical field guide.
AC Motors
Induction (Asynchronous): rugged workhorse; rotor torque is induced by a rotating stator field.
Synchronous (PMAC/Servo): rotor locks to stator field (often permanent magnets); used in many modern servo systems.
VFD (Induction) Servo Drive (Synchronous)DC Motors
Brushed DC: simple voltage control; brushes/commutator handle commutation.
Brushless DC (BLDC): electronic commutation via driver; long life & high efficiency.
From Brushless: two common control styles
- Stepper: open-loop step control (pulse/dir). Encoder optional.
- Servo (BLDC/PMSM): closed-loop with encoder/resolver.
Direct-Drive Linear
Flat or tubular linear motors produce force without screws/belts. Consider them when you need high dynamics and zero backlash.
Servo Drive Scale/Encoder FeedbackMotor Decision Flowchart
Start at the left and follow the prompts.If you must guarantee accuracy under varying loads or sync multiple axes, choose closed-loop.
Yes → Servo No → Open-Loop OptionsFans, pumps, conveyors with modest accuracy.
Yes → AC Induction No, need indexing/holding → StepperPortable tools, lab rigs, hobby fixtures.
→ Brushed DCAC Induction (Asynchronous)
Control: Across-the-line for fixed speed; add a VFD for variable speed/vector control.
Feedback: None required; optional encoder for advanced vector control.
Cost: $ lowest lifetime cost; rugged.
Stepper (Brushless, Open-Loop)
Control: Stepper drive (pulse/dir, microstepping).
Feedback: Optional encoder for stall detect/closed-loop hybrids.
Cost: $$ economical precise indexing.
Brushed DC
Control: Direct voltage or PWM H-bridge; simplest setup.
Feedback: Optional (tach/encoder) if you need regulation.
Cost: $–$$ but brushes wear (maintenance).
Servo (AC PMSM or BLDC)
Control: Servo drive with current/velocity/position loops.
Feedback: Encoder/Resolver required.
Cost: $$$–$$$$ highest performance.
Linear Motor (Direct-Drive)
Control: Servo drive; often high-resolution linear scale.
Feedback: Required for precision.
Cost: $$$$ specialized, zero backlash.
What to Specify
Control & Drive
AC Induction: across-the-line or VFD for speed control.
Stepper: stepper drive (pulse/dir, microstep).
Servo: servo drive (fieldbus/analog/pulse).
Brushed DC: voltage or PWM H-bridge.
Feedback
Required: Servo, Linear motors.
Optional: Stepper (for stall detect/closed-loop), AC Induction (for vector control), Brushed DC (for regulation).
Application Fit
Define load/inertia, speed & accel, duty cycle, precision, environment (IP/temp), and mechanical interface (frame/shaft/gearbox).
Quick Comparison
| Type | Control / Drive | Feedback | Torque & Speed | Precision | Typical Use | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AC Induction | Across-the-line (fixed) or VFD for variable/vector | None (optional encoder for vector) | Good continuous torque; wide speed with VFD | Moderate | Fans, pumps, conveyors, mixers | $ |
| Stepper | Stepper drive (pulse/dir, microstep) | Optional encoder (hybrid closed-loop) | High holding torque low speed; torque drops at RPM | High repeatability (indexing) | Pick-and-place, labelers, small gantries | $$ |
| Brushed DC | Voltage/PWM via H-bridge | Optional tach/encoder | High starting torque; moderate max speed | Low–Moderate | Actuators, tools, test rigs | $–$$ |
| BLDC (non-servo) | BLDC driver (trapezoidal; Hall or sensorless) | Halls optional; encoder optional | Efficient; wide speed range | Moderate | AGVs/AMRs, pumps, fans, compact modules | $$ |
| Servo (PMSM/BLDC) | Servo drive (current/velocity/position) | Encoder/Resolver required | High torque density; excellent dynamics | Very high | Robotics, CNC, high-speed packaging | $$$–$$$$ |
| Linear Motor | Servo drive; linear scale | Required | High continuous thrust; zero backlash | Micron-level | Semiconductor, inspection, metrology | $$$$ |
Optional: Typical Voltage Ranges
Show common supply voltages (for teaching)
AC Induction: 120–480 VAC (1- or 3-phase), global variants exist.
Servo (AC PMSM): 200/230 VAC or 400/480 VAC 3-phase drives (low-voltage servos 24–60 VDC exist).
BLDC/Stepper/Brushed DC: typically 12–60 VDC (industrial up to ~90–170 VDC with appropriate drives).
Always match motor insulation, drive rating, and local codes.Teaching Notes
Inertia Matching
For fast moves, keep load inertia / motor inertia within manufacturer guidelines (often <10:1 for servos). Gearboxes help.
Thermal vs Peak
Size to continuous (thermal) torque with margin; ensure peaks (accel/settle) stay within drive/motor limits.
Environment
IP rating, temperature, washdown coatings, and bearing type matter as much as torque/speed.
Have a spec you want checked? Start a Build Motor request and we’ll validate drive compatibility, feedback, and sizing.
