We developed a custom solution for the POG10 DN 1024 I encoder, intended for heavy-duty drive systems where 1024 PPR HTL incremental feedback must stay stable under shaft vibration, high temperature, terminal-box wiring, and EMC noise. This is a POG 10 incremental encoder configuration, not a POG 9G twin encoder and not an FSL speed-switch version.
Typical production lead time: 15 working days.
Model reading is direct:
- DN = K1, K2, K0 output signals
- 1024 = 1024 pulses per revolution
- I = 9–30 VDC, HTL output with inverted signals
- POG10 = Ø11 mm shaft, EURO flange B10, terminal-box heavy-duty body
The weak point is not the optical sensing first. In real installations, problems usually start at counter bandwidth, terminal grounding, shielding continuity, K0 reference stability, or coupling torsion.


Where the System Fails First
At 1024 PPR, the pulse stream is already high enough to test the PLC or drive counter input. The encoder output frequency limit is ≤120 kHz, but the full system only works if the counter input, cable routing, shielding, and grounding can preserve clean HTL edges. If the counter margin is weak, the system loses pulses before the encoder shows a hardware fault.
Typical failure points:
- Counter input too slow → missed pulses
- Poor terminal-box grounding → false HTL edges
- Shield interruption → unstable speed feedback
- Wrong K1/K2 phase reading → reversed direction
- Unstable K0 pulse → reference position error
- Rigid coupling → torsional shock into the Ø11 mm shaft
The K0 zero pulse needs special attention. Under vibration or poor shielding, K0 instability often appears earlier than total K1/K2 signal loss.
Mechanical Boundary
POG10 is built stronger than small incremental encoders: ≤300 N axial load, ≤450 N radial load, IP66 protection, 20 g vibration, and -40 °C to +100 °C operating range. These margins are useful, but they do not fix poor shaft alignment. In heavy drives, torsional vibration usually becomes a counting problem before it becomes visible bearing damage.
Use the terminal box carefully. A loose shield path or mixed grounding between drive cabinet and encoder housing will make the HTL signal look present but unreliable.
Installation Notes
- Keep the model format as POG10 DN 1024 I
- Confirm counter frequency at real RPM before commissioning
- Keep terminal-box grounding continuous
- Separate encoder cable from inverter and motor power wiring
- Verify K1 / K2 phase direction before startup
- Check K0 stability under vibration
- Use a flexible coupling suitable for Ø11 mm shaft
- Do not write this as TTL or FSL unless the model explicitly shows it
Key Data
- Model: POG10 DN 1024 I
- Type: Heavy-duty incremental encoder
- Resolution: 1024 PPR
- Output: HTL with inverted signals
- Signals: K1, K2, K0 + inverted
- Supply voltage: 9–30 VDC
- Output frequency: ≤120 kHz
- Shaft: Ø11 mm stainless steel
- Flange: EURO flange B10
- Protection: IP66
- Operating temperature: -40 °C to +100 °C
- Optional temperature range: -50 °C to +100 °C
- Shaft load: ≤300 N axial / ≤450 N radial
- Vibration: 20 g, 10–2000 Hz
- Shock: 200 g, 6 ms
- Connection: Terminal box
- Weight: Approx. 1.9 kg

