Actuator & Stage Design

When catalog actuators and stages don’t quite fit, AutoMotion Dynamics designs and sources custom linear and rotary axes that match your loads, precision targets, envelope, and environment—so the rest of the machine has a solid motion foundation.

We live in the details: thrust and torque, reflected inertia, screw critical speed, bearing life, deflection, stiffness, and safety margins. The result is motion hardware that feels “over-thought” in the best way.

When a Custom Stage or Actuator Makes Sense

Tight or Awkward Envelopes

Machine layout forces the axis into a shape or length that standard catalogs don’t support.

  • Stroke doesn’t match standard lengths
  • Unusual mounting orientations
  • Need for integrated brackets or interfaces

Higher Precision or Stiffness

You need better straightness, flatness, or repeatability than typical off-the-shelf systems.

  • Critical alignment between multiple axes
  • Higher rigidity under changing loads
  • Backlash and compliance must be controlled

Environment & Lifetime

Standard actuators struggle with the duty cycle, cleanliness, or harsh environment.

  • 24/7 duty or high cycle counts
  • Dust, coolant, washdown, or vacuum
  • Special seals, materials, or lubrication

What We Design & Deliver

Linear Stages & Axes

Single-axis and multi-axis stages built around your application, not the other way around.

Ball Screw Stages Belt-Driven Axes Linear Motor Stages Gantry Axes Vertical / Z Axes

Actuators & Cylinders

Push/pull motion with the right thrust, speed, and life for the job.

Electric Cylinders Rodless Actuators Guided Actuators Twin-Rail Actuators Integrated Load Supports

Rotary & Indexing Motion

Rotary axes that play nicely with your linear motion.

Rotary Tables Gearboxes Cam or Index Drives Direct Drive Options

Motion Stack: Mechanics + Motor + Feedback

We don’t stop at the aluminum. Each design includes the full motion stack and its interactions:

  • Actuator / stage mechanics
  • Motor and gearbox selection
  • Feedback (encoders, linear scales, home & limit sensors)
  • Interfaces and mounting to your frame and payload

Design Documentation

Delivered in a way that makes it easy to build, integrate, and support the axis long term.

  • Drawings and 3D models for your CAD
  • Bill of materials with manufacturer part numbers
  • Motion sizing summary and assumptions
  • Recommended maintenance and spare parts

Our Actuator & Stage Design Process

1. Define the Motion

We start with how the axis needs to move—not with a product catalog.

  • Payload, CG, and fixturing
  • Stroke, speeds, and cycle times
  • Accuracy, repeatability, and stiffness targets

2. Environment & Constraints

We account for the real world around the axis.

  • Available envelope and mounting surfaces
  • Ambient conditions and contaminants
  • Plant standards for motors/drives

3. Sizing & Modeling

Loads and motion profiles are run through calculations—not guesses.

mass = 40.0 # kg stroke = 0.8 # m t_move = 0.6 # s repeat = 20 # cycles/min # compute accel, thrust, screw torque, # critical speed, and bearing life

4. Mechanical Design

We lay out the stage or actuator with manufacturable details.

  • Rail and bearing arrangements
  • Screw / belt / linear motor selection
  • End brackets, carriages, and mounting features

5. Motor & Feedback Integration

We make sure the axis plays nicely with your control ecosystem.

  • Motor and gearbox interface geometry
  • Encoder or scale selection and mounting
  • Provisions for homing, limits, and sensors

6. Review, Iterate & Release

We review the design with your team, tweak as needed, and release.

  • Design reviews with your mechanical & controls team
  • Final drawings and 3D models
  • Implementation and commissioning support as needed

What to Send for an Axis or Stage Review

To start a design or verify a concept, share whatever you have—it doesn’t have to be perfect:

Application Details

  • Short description of what the axis does
  • Payload mass and approximate center of gravity
  • Required stroke, speeds, and cycle times
  • Accuracy / repeatability expectations

Constraints & Preferences

  • Available envelope and mounting constraints
  • Environmental details (dust, coolant, washdown, etc.)
  • Preferred motor/drive vendors or existing standards
  • Any previous failures or concerns

We’ll respond with a written concept, sizing notes, and suggested next steps.

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