I definitely have a low bandwidth application. That should work to my advantage using this method.
In an attempt to understand the CTAXTRAP instruction in Designer I discovered the yellow Instruction Help window has the description for CTAXLIMT instead. I'm guessing it was copied and pasted but not edited for the differences.
b_carlton, I don't understand how to apply your modified "distance left to travel". Is that applied using the CTAXTRAP instruction? I'm interested because I expect my control problems are going to be in hitting the target. My limitation is I can't reverse the machine and maintain correct material alignment. Material on the conveyor will always travel in one direction (except for un-jamming). I want maximum acceleration but hitting the target is a must. I can't know how hard that will be until I put the drive together and run it. I'm a few weeks away for that. If I have the option for a different slope on deceleration that's good.
OK, I had a thought, CTAXCFG might let me set acceleration, yes it does. Can I use variables or constants, YES. The green/red dots (GO/NO-GO) great feature in Designer. I'm liking Do-More, More and More.
I ran across the article that turned me on to CTRIO2. Automation NOTEBOOK issue 24, Tech Brief by Jason Horine. Jason says "When a servo is too much and a stepper is not enough, simple closed loop control might do the trick."That caught my attention but Jason didn't suggest what to use for driving the load. I think an AC induction motor and VFD might just work. I intend to find out.