On Tue, 2012-10-09 at 12:09 -0500, Jon Elson wrote:
> Bruce Layne wrote:
> > LinuxCNC was initially conceived to directly control machine motion in 
> > realtime using a parallel port.

Ah, if my memory serves me correctly we get to blame Matt Shaver for the
stepper interface. ;-)
IIRC he mentioned to Fred "that is certainly would be nice if emc could
run steppers"...................

Dave


> No, not really true.  The original EMC (1) was conceived to control a 
> servo machine
> with a dumb motion interface board such as the Servo-to-Go.  A board with
> encoder counters, velocity DACs and some digital I/O, but no processor.  
> Steppers
> through the parallel port was later added.  Then, after the change to 
> EMC2 (which
> became LinuxCNC) many other interface devices and some outboard motion
> controllers were added.
> EMC2, mostly the addition of HAL between the interpreter and low-level
> motion hardware, was a way to make all this more flexible, but not to change
> any part of the existing functionality ar directly add new functionality.
> It was a way to make adding that functionality a lot easier, and that has
> certainly happened.
> 
> At least, that is my take on the history of it.
> > I love being able to pick up a cheap or free PC and use it as a machine 
> > controller, but I think it'd also be great if there was a small, low 
> > cost commercially available PC that is pretty much guaranteed to work as 
> > a LinuxCNC controller.
> Well, the Intel D525MW was that for a while, and as soon as some of the 
> other vendor's
> products get qualified, we should be able to recommend a quite 
> reasonably priced
> unit that will be available for a few years.  A complete D525 system 
> with box, power
> supply SSD drive and memory can be had for about $150 - 200, depending 
> on what
> you need.  If the RT-Preempt kernel turns out to be suitable for 
> LinuxCNC, then
> we may be able to move to the BeagleBone ($89) or RasberryPi (price and 
> availabilty
> not so clear).  I personally think the Pi is a bit too low-powered to be 
> usable, but
> the Beagle looks promising, especially if the GUI is hosted on another CPU.
> 
> Jon
> 
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