Okuma CNC Alarm 1050 — What It Means
Alarm 1050 on an Okuma CNC (OSP-P300, OSP-P200, OSP-P100 series — Multus, GENOS, Millac, LB/MA series machines) indicates a servo alarm on one of the axis drives. Okuma uses its own proprietary servo drive system (Okuma PREX or DC servo drives on older machines). Alarm 1050 is typically accompanied by an axis designation (e.g., “1050 X-axis servo alarm”) and a servo drive fault code visible on the servo drive itself.
Common Causes
- Axis servo overcurrent — A collision, excessive cutting force, or mechanical binding caused the servo motor to exceed the drive’s current limit.
- Servo drive overtemperature — Blocked cooling or failed cooling fan in the servo drive section of the electrical cabinet causes thermal overload.
- Axis feedback (encoder/resolver) fault — Okuma machines use high-resolution position encoders (Okuma OSE or BEI series). A damaged encoder or feedback cable generates position errors that the drive interprets as a servo alarm.
- Motor insulation fault — Degraded motor winding insulation causes ground fault current that the servo drive detects as an overcurrent.
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Note axis and sub-alarm code — On the OSP display, navigate to the alarm detail screen. Record the axis designation and any secondary code. Also read the drive fault indicator on the servo amplifier inside the cabinet.
- Check for collision or obstruction — If the alarm occurred during cutting, inspect the faulted axis for tooling damage, chips under way covers, or a stopped workpiece. Clear any obstruction.
- Power cycle — Turn off the main power (NCK and servo) completely. Wait 3 minutes (allows DC bus to discharge). Power on and attempt to re-home the affected axis. A clean power cycle clears transient faults.
- Inspect encoder feedback cable — Trace the encoder or resolver cable from the motor to the control cabinet. Look for damaged insulation at cable bend points, particularly at the motor junction box and cable clamps. A broken shield can cause noise-induced servo alarms.
- Test motor insulation — Disconnect the power cable at the drive. Megger each motor phase to the motor housing. Values below 1 MΩ at 500VDC indicate failed winding insulation.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Okuma servo drive | Amazon | OEM; must match machine model and axis rating |
| Okuma OSE encoder | Amazon | OEM position encoder; requires axis setup after replacement |
| Encoder/resolver cable | Amazon | Replace if insulation or shield is damaged |
| Servo motor | Amazon | Replace if winding insulation fails Megger test |
When to Call a Pro
Okuma servo system repair requires Okuma-authorized service. Encoder replacement on an Okuma absolute position system requires a reference return procedure specific to the machine; incorrect setup causes positioning errors and potential crashes.