Hi Dave .
Maybe you are misunderstanding my message.
This video shows how the company that is making the CNC hardware solution
is integrating their hardware/software
with that gantry machine (woodworking I think).
The machine seem to work well but I don't know what "specifc solution" they
did.
They only told me that the gantry axes kinematics is well supported by
their CNC system with high performance level.

bigalex


On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 5:28 PM, Dave <e...@dc9.tzo.com> wrote:

> On 5/24/2013 12:50 AM, Viesturs Lācis wrote:
> > 2013/5/24 Jon Elson<el...@pico-systems.com>
> >
> >
> >> Dave wrote:
> >>
> >>> I did a gantry system with LinuxCNC a few years back.  The gantry was
> >>> very stiff and self squaring when powered off.  The gantry was 10-12
> >>> feet across and very heavy.   It used used 2 - 1 KW servo drives
> driving
> >>> two ball screws on each end of the gantry for the Y axis.  In order to
> >>> keep things simple I used step and direction on the servo drives and
> fed
> >>> the same signals to both of the Y axis servo drives.
> >>>
> >> Thanks for the info.  This machine has servo motors on each end of the
> >> gantry,
> >> so it really needs LinuxCNC in the loop for BOTH motor/encoder units.
> >> What you did works great for step/dir drives, but won't work for servos.
> >>
> >> When LinuxCNC starts, the encoder counters are zeroed.  When it is
> moving
> >> toward the home switch, it is going to keep them synched the same way
> >> as at startup.  But, when it arrives at home, the first axis' counter is
> >> going to get zeroed.  At this point, something special has to happen to
> >> prevent
> >> the two motors from diverging.  Assuming it has moved 10000 counts
> >> from startup to the home switch, the first motor to find the index mark
> >> on its encoder will suddenly have the encoder count jump from 10000
> >> to zero.  I'm not sure what the other motor will be following at that
> >> instant.
> >>
> >>
> > I have been following this thread and it seems to me that I have missed
> > something.
> > Last week I finally made some chips on my self-built router with servos.
> > The construction is not most rigid, but it squares itself within 10 mm or
> > so, the gantry is 3 m long.
> > I use gantrykins, homing simple - each joint homes to its own switch (I
> > have small inductive proximity switches). The main thing is to set up
> > homing sequence and set all the search and latch and final velocities to
> be
> > the same.
> > The way it works - both joints start their homing moves simultaneously,
> > move at the same speed, so gantry is not racked and, as much as I can see
> > on screen, it seems that both joints meet their homeswitches pretty much
> at
> > the same time. I have pretty slow home search velocity (and latch
> velocity
> > even slower), so that is why I already have G0 G53 X10 Y10 in my MDI
> > history to bring machine back to "almost home".
> > I recall that in first posts there was mentioned something about homing
> to
> > index, but I really do not see a point for that, so I somehow do not
> > understand, where is the problem.
> >
> > Andy Pugh last autumn shared a way to add a new HAL pin to Axis GUI to
> > switch machine to world mode, so I have it connected to axis.n.is-homed
> > pins through and2 components and it works pretty nicely for me. You could
> > use that to make sure that operator will not start jogging the machine in
> > joint mode, once it has been homed.
> >
> >
> > Viesturs
> >
> >
>
> Sounds like you have this nailed down already. Perhaps this is even
> easier than I thought.
>
> How are your two parallel axes arranged with regards to XYZ assignments
> etc?
>
> Are you tying the axes together via hal after homing??
>
> Can you post your ini and hal file? (That would answer all questions..)
>
> Thanks,
>
> Dave Cole
>
>
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