A spindle drive has a torque/speed performance as follows:<br><br>Constant torque from 0rpm to a base speed and constant power output above this speed.<br><br>Example,<br>0rpm to 1500rpm with 10Nm and above 1500rpm the power output (1.5kW) is constant to 6000rpm. So at 6000rpm the torque is...
If you really mean a motor wound for 60Hz then, no, it will not produce the same power at 50Hz if the same voltage is applied. Output power reduces by 5/6ths as shaft power is the product of torque (similar at both frequencies) and speed. Clearly, if the speed reduces by 5/6ths so does the shaft...
Try <A HREF="http://www.hsi-inc-com" TARGET="_new">www.hsi-inc-com</A>. They supply many bar code reader manufacturers with oscillating stepper motors (series 11000 to 36000) from 11mm to 36mm diameters with frequencies up to 50Hz, depending on load inertia.<br>