Are these inductosyn scales or A quad B type? Inductosyn scales usually have 
a board that converts the signal to A quad B.  The signal is like a 
resolver, Sine/Cosine. A quad B scales (Like a glass scale) have a A/Not A - 
B/Not B signal. The black box (or EXE box) controls the signal amplitude and 
monitors the bulb on the reader for the glass scale. The EXE box does a 
little more than that but thats the nuts and bolts of it. Most controls want 
to see the A quad B type pulses.  This is how they can track direction, 
position and speed. Glass scales give a feed back like a hand held OEM mpg 
unit.

          Dave

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Stuart Stevenson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "EMC2-Users-List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2008 11:35 PM
Subject: [Emc-users] Cordax CMM


> Gentlemen,
>    Another project, another question.
>    I bought an old Sheffield Cordax manual CMM. This is supposed to
> replace a surface plate and height gages. Our inspectors have
> experience with manual CMM's. They are looking forward to using it
> instead of height gages.
>    This was supposed to be a running machine. It was running "after a
> fashion". The DRO always shows fault lights. When the EMC men were
> here we got it functioning. While using it we find one scale will
> count correct sometimes, other times it will only count in one
> direction and other times it counts up when the axis is moved in
> either direction. On another board a trim pot will sometimes short and
> sometimes work correct and sometime open.
>    I identify with age problems. Sometimes things work and sometimes
> they don't.
>    Needless to say this does not inspire confidence in the machine.
>    I replaced the bulbs in the scale read heads. I have a good signal
> into the DRO from each scale.
>    Sheffield has the replacement parts BUT the expense is incredible.
> The bulbs, just the little bulbs not the read head, were $160.00 each.
> I haven't priced the amplifier/converter board. I am afraid to. I
> don't think I even want to know.
>    SO ----
>    The scale feedback to the DRO is four wires with a sin wave on
> each. These are supposed to be 0, 90, 180 and 270 degrees. Is there a
> way to convert the sin wave into a pulse? If I can convert the sin
> wave to a pulse I will hook two of the pulse signals from each axis to
> a soft encoder in EMC2 and have an EMC2 CMM.
>    At this time it would be just a DRO. Maybe we could add functions
> later ie. coordinate system rotation, etc...
>    All help, comments and suggestions are greatly appreciated.
> thanks
> Stuart
>
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