Fanuc Alarm 700 — Spindle Overheat Detailed Guide
Fanuc alarm 700 means the spindle motor temperature exceeded the safe limit or the spindle thermal protection circuit reported an overtemperature condition. This detailed guide focuses specifically on spindle overheat diagnosis, not the broader Fanuc 700-series alarm family.
Common Causes
- Cooling fan not running on the spindle motor or spindle blower assembly
- Coolant and chip buildup blocking spindle motor airflow passages
- Thermistor drifting high and falsely reporting an overheat condition
- Bearings creating excess friction at any RPM
- Heavy duty cycle from long roughing passes without thermal recovery
- Control cabinet heat raising spindle amplifier temperature and indirectly heating the spindle motor
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Check spindle cooling immediately. With the machine powered, verify the spindle motor cooling fan or blower is actually moving air. A failed blower is the fastest path to repeat alarm 700.
- Let the spindle cool fully. Alarm 700 often needs 20 to 30 minutes of cool-down before reset.
- Inspect air passages. Remove chip and dust buildup around the motor shroud, fan guard, and ducting.
- Test the spindle thermistor. Compare resistance at ambient temperature to the motor documentation. A drifting sensor can falsely trip the alarm.
- Monitor spindle load and current. High current at modest RPM often points to bearing drag.
- Review the program. If the alarm happens after long heavy cuts, reduce sustained spindle load and add dwell or toolpath relief where possible.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Spindle cooling fan or blower | Amazon | Match voltage and motor frame |
| Spindle thermistor | Amazon | Use OEM equivalent |
| Spindle bearings | Amazon | Precision install required |
| Air filter media | Amazon | Some machines use filtered spindle blower air |
When to Call a Pro
If alarm 700 returns after cooling airflow is restored, the spindle bearings or spindle motor itself may be failing. Bearing replacement and spindle rebuild work should go to a qualified machine tool technician.