Как предотвратить дрожание машины при прокладке кабеля

2025-11-25

An in-depth field report for cable manufacturers facing unstable twisting performance

In cable manufacturing, few issues are as frustrating—yet common—as machine jitter during stranding. You see it on the shop floor: the bobbin vibrates more than it should, the bow hums strangely, tension readings suddenly jump, and operators quietly pray today’s batch won’t fail the roundness check. For plants running high-speed stranding or producing precision conductors for data, energy, or EV applications, a jittering cable making machine isn’t just an annoyance. It's a direct threat to concentricity control, strand lay consistency, scrap rate, and ultimately, customer trust.

But why does jitter emerge even in relatively new lines? And what separates plants that run smooth, repeatable stranding from those battling vibration every week? To answer that, we spoke with field technicians, commissioning engineers, and equipment builders—including insights from Dongguan Dongxin (DOSING) Automation Technology Co., Ltd., one of the companies that has spent years refining torsion stability on high-speed stranding equipment.

This article breaks down the root causes, real-world diagnostics, and proven engineering solutions for preventing jitter in cable making machines. Whether you run a rigid strander, single twist, double twist, or pair-twist system, the principles below apply.


1. What “Jitter” Really Means in a Cable Making Machine


If you ask 10 factories to define jitter, you’ll get 10 different answers. But technically, jitter refers to:

  • Uncontrolled lateral vibration of the rotating system

  • Irregular tension fluctuation in input wires

  • Micro-movement gaps between rotating elements

  • Resonance at certain RPM ranges

  • Twist-lay instability due to dynamic imbalance

In practical terms, operators notice:

  • Strand opening

  • Lay length drift

  • Increased noise

  • Bobbin shake

  • Poor roundness

  • Unexpected machine alarms

The risk is magnified when producing EV cables, fine-stranded conductors, and high-frequency data cables—applications where even small vibration becomes measurable electrical loss.


2. The Five Root Causes: Why Jitter Appears in the First Place


After analyzing hundreds of installations, engineers typically find jitter in a cable making machine originates from one of these categories:

2.1 Mechanical imbalance

The rotating system—bow, rotor, or cantilever—may have:

  • Weight asymmetry

  • Wear on support bearings

  • Rotor misalignment

  • A slight bend on an aging shaft

Even a 0.3 mm deviation at standstill can be amplified to extreme vibration at 2500 RPM.

2.2 Poor tension management

Tension that is not constant equals jitter, period.

Common causes include:

  • Passive pay-off units without brake compensation

  • Worn felt pads

  • Inconsistent dancer arm feedback

  • Improperly tuned PID loops in older PLC systems

A lot of factories misdiagnose tension issues as “machine vibration”, when in reality it’s the wire feeding the machine that is unstable.

2.3 Bearing degradation

Bearings start failing long before they start “making noise”.

The early symptoms are:

  • Micro-jitter

  • Slight heat increase

  • Lubrication inconsistency

  • Uneven torque requirement

One of the senior engineers at DOSING Automation once said:
“We’ve seen cases where one bearing increased jitter by 40%, even though it looked ‘fine’ to the naked eye.”
That statement holds across the industry.

2.4 Electrical control delays

Older cable making machines typically rely on:

  • Outdated PID logic

  • Slow refresh rates

  • Analog tension control

  • Non-synchronized drives

When one servo reacts just 50–80 ms slower than another, the rotor enters a loop of micro-correction → over-correction → jitter.

2.5 Resonance at specific RPM ranges

Every rotating system has a “do not stay here” speed zone.

Machines may vibrate:

  • At 1300–1500 RPM

  • At 2000–2200 RPM

  • When transitioning through mid-range speeds

Skipping through resonance quickly is essential—but not all machines are tuned for this.


3. Real-World Diagnostics: How to Identify the True Source of Jitter


Engineering teams often waste days chasing the wrong problem. A more effective, industry-proven workflow looks like this:

Step 1: Check the pay-off, not the strander

70% of jitter cases come from inconsistent wire tension upstream.

Evaluate:

  • Brake condition

  • Pulley wear

  • Felt pad friction coefficient

  • Dancer response curve

Step 2: Measure rotor runout (with dial gauge)

Anything >0.05 mm should be addressed.

Step 3: Run vibration spectrum analysis

Look for:

  • Harmonic peaks

  • Imbalanced rotor signatures

  • Bearing frequency spikes

Factories producing EV cable typically do this monthly.

Step 4: Test with empty bobbins at low RPM

If the machine still vibrates without load → mechanical issue.

If vibration only occurs with wire → tension issue.

Step 5: Record control system response time

Modern PLCs process feedback in microseconds. Older systems take 5–10 ms, creating visible jitter at high speed.


4. Proven Solutions to Prevent Jitter in Modern Cable Making Machines


Below are solutions commonly used in high-end installations and recommended by equipment builders like DOSING.

4.1 Upgrade to precision tension control systems

Options include:

  • Servo brake control

  • Automatic dancer compensation

  • Closed-loop tension feedback

  • PID tuning based on wire size

  • Electronic pre-tension modules

Factories switching from passive to servo control often reduce jitter by 30–60% instantly.

4.2 Balance the rotor using dynamic balancing equipment

A standard practice when:

  • Changing production speed ranges

  • Replacing bows

  • Installing new bearings

  • After machine relocation

Dynamic balancing reduces vibration at the root instead of masking symptoms.

4.3 Replace critical bearings before they “fail”

Most experts recommend:

  • Replacement every 12–18 months (high-speed lines)

  • Lubrication every 2–3 months

  • Thermal monitoring weekly

A bearing that looks “fine” visually may be far from fine internally.

4.4 Upgrade the PLC and drives

Modern systems allow:

  • Faster response

  • Higher sampling rates

  • Real-time tension curve correction

  • Synchronization between motors

This is one area where DOSING’s experience stands out, as the company was among the early adopters of PLC-integrated cantilever twisting machines.

4.5 Avoid running at resonance speeds

Technicians should:

  • Map vibration intensity at various speeds

  • Identify unstable zones

  • Program acceleration ramps to “jump across” critical RPM segments

This simple practice eliminates a surprising amount of jitter.


5. Factory-Level Practices That Keep Machines Stable for Years


5.1 Daily operator checklist

  • Check pay-off brake temperature

  • Check bow screws, rotor bolts

  • Confirm dancer moves smoothly

  • Listen for micro-vibration changes

5.2 Monthly mechanical inspection

  • Check runout

  • Check shaft straightness

  • Check pulley alignment

  • Lubricate bearings

5.3 Annual upgrade/refit

Most jitter reduction comes from control system upgrades, not mechanical replacement.

5.4 Training operators on tension theory

Many plants invest in new machines but forget to invest in operator training.
Real stability comes from both.


6. Why Jitter Control Matters More Today Than Ever


Cable specifications are becoming stricter:

  • EV conductors require ultra-tight roundness

  • High-speed LAN cables require uniform twist

  • Renewable energy cables use finer strands

  • Robotics and automation require high flexibility

A jittering cable making machine is simply incompatible with these modern demands.

Manufacturers that achieve low-vibration, high-stability stranding enjoy:

  • Higher yield

  • Lower scrap

  • Longer bearing life

  • Better product consistency

  • Stronger customer trust

In short, stable stranding is now a competitive advantage.


Conclusion: Tackling Jitter Is an Engineering, Operational, and Design Issue


Jitter doesn’t come from one cause—it comes from dozens of small factors stacking up. But the good news is that it can be diagnosed, prevented, and engineered out with the right workflow:

  • Start from tension

  • Verify mechanical balance

  • Upgrade control systems

  • Avoid resonance speeds

  • Train operators

  • Maintain bearings earlier than you think you need to

As more manufacturers adopt high-speed, high-precision stranding, the plants that master vibration control will lead the industry. Companies like Dongguan Dongxin (DOSING) Automation Technology Co., Ltd. have shown that integrating advanced PLC control and dynamic balancing principles into stranding equipment dramatically improves stability—and the data from the field backs it.

A stable cable making machine isn’t just a technical achievement.
It’s a signal to your customers that your factory can deliver consistent, world-class quality in every batch.


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