RT
weld_tech_rajan
OP
March 12, 2026
Running a Miller Dynasty 280 DX on a CNC plasma/weld table and we're getting these annoying stutters in the wire feed roughly every 45 seconds of continuous run. We're using ER70S-6 0.035" wire, Lincoln Electric spool, shielding gas is 75/25 Ar/CO2 at 18 CFH. The stutter causes porosity and surface rippling on the bead. Drive roll tension looks fine, liner was replaced 3 months ago. Anybody dealt with this on a Dynasty or similar CNC-integrated Miller setup?
MV
mig_veteran_dave
March 13, 2026
I had the exact same symptoms on my Miller Axcess 450 integrated with a Fanuc ARC Mate. Nine times out of ten when it's rhythmic like that — every 40-50 seconds — it's the conduit liner heating up and micro-expanding just enough to create drag. Even a "new" liner can have this issue if it's cheap OEM replacement stock. The fix for us was switching to a Bernard AccuLock MDX liner (the blue ones) and making sure the liner trim length was exactly to spec per Miller's guide — most guys leave it 1–2mm too long which creates a bird's nest buildup point right at the neck. Also check your drive roll groove; if you're running knurled rolls for flux-core and forgot to swap back to V-groove for solid wire, that chews the wire surface and creates intermittent arc instability that looks exactly like a feed stutter.
CX
cnc_xavier_pro
March 14, 2026
Don't overlook the CNC controller side either — we had a Hobart Handler integrated with a Hypertherm table that showed identical symptoms and it turned out to be a PWM signal noise issue from the motion controller interfering with the wire feeder's speed control board. The fix was adding a ferrite choke on the feeder control cable. In 2025-2026 machines, especially anything running EtherCAT or Profinet for torch control, electrical noise from servo drives can bleed into analog feeder circuits. Miller actually issued a service bulletin on this (SB-2024-MW-14) for specific Dynasty models paired with third-party CNC tables — worth downloading from their service portal.
SM
shop_mgr_suresh
March 15, 2026
One thing nobody mentions is spool brake tension — it's almost always set too tight from factory on the Dynasty 280 series. The spool should spin freely with only light resistance; if you release the wire and the spool keeps spinning more than half a turn, it's too loose, but if it stops dead instantly, the brake spring is over-tensioned and it fights the feeder motor creating that rhythmic stutter as the motor wins, releases, wins, releases. Loosen the center nut by about a quarter turn and retest. This is in the manual but buried on page 47 and nobody reads it. Also, in 2026 with the newer auto-darkening helmet standards under ANSI Z87.1-2023, make sure your helmet switching speed is ≤1/25,000 sec if you're doing high-frequency starts — the old helmets were causing operators to flinch and bump the torch, which was getting blamed on the machine.