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Servo Motor Fault Codes Guide

⚡ Quick Answer

Master reference for servo motor fault codes, drive alarms, and common troubleshooting patterns across Fanuc, Mitsubishi, Siemens, Yaskawa, Delta, and more.

Servo Motor Fault Codes — What They Usually Mean

Servo alarms can be intimidating because the motor, encoder, amplifier, mechanics, and control all interact. In practice, most servo faults fall into five groups: overcurrent, encoder feedback, overtravel/position error, overtemperature, and communication faults.

Jump to Fix

Common Servo Fault Categories

Fault TypeTypical Meaning
OvercurrentAxis jam, cable short, amplifier problem
Encoder feedbackLost position, encoder cable fault, battery issue
Position deviationAxis can’t keep up with commanded motion
OvertemperatureMotor overloaded or cooling poor
CommunicationDrive network or amplifier not ready

Common Causes Across Brands

Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}

  1. Separate mechanical from electrical — Can the axis move freely by hand or jog slowly?
  2. Read both control alarm and drive amplifier alarm — They rarely tell the full story alone.
  3. Inspect encoder and motor cables — They fail more often than the motor itself.
  4. Check axis load and lubrication — Dry ways and tight ballscrews create servo faults fast.
  5. Back up parameters before drive replacement.

Common Brands

When to Call a Pro

If a servo axis faults repeatedly under low load or loses home position unexpectedly, get a qualified motion technician involved. Persistent servo alarms can damage machine accuracy long before total failure happens.


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