Lin engineering

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Lin Engineering is a Step Motor manufacturing firm headquarterd in Santa Clara, CA.

The company is one of only a handful of step motor manufacturers that still manfuctures its motors in the United States. Though Lin Engineering’s core business is the development and manufacturing of step motors, the company has expanded its product line to incorporate microstepping drivers and controllers as well.

Contents

[edit] History

Lin Engineering was founded in 1987 by current President and CEO, Ted T. Lin. The company began as a consulting company specializing in step motor applications. In 1991, Lin Engineering expanded its operations to include the manufacturing of its own hybrid step motors.

[edit] CoLE

In 2007, Lin Engineering began the College of Lin Engineering, otherwise known as CoLE. CoLE was created in order to maintain one of the company’s core ideologies: Continuous Learning. Through the CoLE system, the company is able to train its employees on everything from step motor technology to basics in finance and accounting. Lin Engineering currently budgets for expenditures of up to $80,000 per year on CoLE.

[edit] Step motor resources

Visitors to the Lin Engineering website are able to access several step motor resources:

  1. An online conversion calculator
  2. An online step motor selection tool guide

The online conversion calculator is a free tool that is used by engineers from various industries. It allows for the easy conversion of Torque, Winding Rating, Inertia, Various Electrical Parameters, Resolution, Distance, and Speed.
The online step motor selection tool, nicknamed Designer’s Corner, gives users access to a step motor selection guide. By using the guide, users are able to see the performance of various motors and compare various selections against one another.

Involvement with the Engineering Community

Application Engineers from Lin Engineering are actively involved with the engineering community. Please see the external links below for links to various white papers written about step motor technology, step motor terminology, how to guides for step motors and so forth.

[edit] External links

  1. T-Connect for Steppers:
  2. Visualizing Step Motor Differences:
  3. How to Use Microstepping to Get More Torque:
  4. Motion Accuracy Problem:
  5. Strengthening Step Motor Lead Attachment:
  6. Comparing the Accuracy of Two-Phase vs. Five-Phase Step Motors: