Mazak Alarm 200 — Spindle Speed Error: What It Means
Mazak Alarm 200 is a spindle speed error — the spindle did not reach or maintain the commanded speed within the tolerance window set in the CNC parameters. On Mazak Mazatrol T-Plus, Fusion 640, Matrix, and SmoothX controls, the spindle encoder feedback is compared against the commanded speed; if the actual speed deviates by more than the allowed percentage for more than the allowed time, Alarm 200 trips. This prevents threading, tapping, and synchronization operations from running on an unstable or uncalibrated spindle.
Common Causes
- Spindle belt slipping or broken — On belt-drive spindles, a worn or broken drive belt causes the spindle to run significantly below commanded speed.
- Spindle drive (inverter) fault — The spindle drive is not delivering enough power to reach commanded speed, due to a drive fault, parameter issue, or drive failure.
- Spindle encoder fault — A failing encoder produces inaccurate speed feedback, causing the control to see a constant “speed error” even when the spindle is running normally.
- Spindle brake not fully releasing — A spindle brake that drags prevents the spindle from reaching commanded speed.
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Check for spindle drive faults — Inspect the spindle inverter/drive panel (often inside the main control cabinet). Look for any active faults or alarm LEDs on the spindle drive. Resolve any drive-level faults before addressing the Mazak alarm.
- Listen and observe the spindle — Command a moderate speed (500 RPM) in MDI. Listen for belt noise (squealing = slipping belt) and watch if the spindle reaches the commanded speed or labors.
- Inspect the spindle belt — Open the spindle drive belt access cover (typically at the top or rear of the spindle head). Check belt tension and condition. A loose or cracked belt causes significant underspeed.
- Check spindle encoder — In the Mazak diagnostic screen, monitor actual spindle RPM feedback while commanding a fixed speed. Unstable or zero feedback at a known running spindle indicates encoder failure.
- Verify spindle speed parameter tolerance — In the Mazak parameter list, find the spindle speed deviation alarm threshold (varies by control type — consult the Mazak service manual). Temporarily widening the tolerance can confirm that a slight deviation is the trigger.
- Check spindle brake — If the machine has an automatic spindle brake (Mazatrol systems often do for ATC orientation), confirm the brake releases fully on a spindle run command. A dragging brake shows as an underspeed condition.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Spindle drive belt | Amazon | Match length, width, and tooth profile to the original |
| Spindle encoder | Amazon | Mazak model-specific; order through Mazak or an authorized Mazak dealer |
| Spindle drive (inverter) | Amazon | If drive faults are confirmed and the drive cannot be repaired |
When to Call a Pro
Spindle belt replacement on vertical machining centers requires removing the spindle head cover and adjusting belt tension precisely. Incorrect tension causes premature belt failure or bearing wear. Have a Mazak-trained technician perform spindle drive work if you’re not experienced with the specific machine model.