I was so annoyed that the estimates for my 3d printing jobs were so far off
(estimated 2 hours, took 8) that I modified the axis code. It looks at the
Velocity and acceleration of each axis and tries to calculate a more
accurate time. It only looks at moves - no G64 or probing. It isn't
perfect,
On 10/15/14 4:07 AM, Frank Tkalcevic wrote:
> I was so annoyed that the estimates for my 3d printing jobs were so far off
> (estimated 2 hours, took 8) that I modified the axis code. It looks at the
> Velocity and acceleration of each axis and tries to calculate a more
> accurate time. It only lo
My guess is the new tool planner's G64 settings are throwing off the estimate.
Try the real time with tighter G64 PXXX, and I suspect your results will differ.
- Original Message -
From: "Sebastian Kuzminsky"
To: "Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)"
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2014 12:
I'm planning on using these pins: http://www.ebay.com/itm/141233257616
which are .053" in dia. with 5mm and .150" pitch.
I would like to connect to the pogos with a connector rather than
soldering a wire. I would like the connector to be between two boards:
http://wallacecompany.com/tmp/Screensho
How about running the actual machine empty for one cycle?
Nicklas Karlsson
On Wed, 15 Oct 2014 21:07:28 +1100
"Frank Tkalcevic" wrote:
> I was so annoyed that the estimates for my 3d printing jobs were so far off
> (estimated 2 hours, took 8) that I modified the axis code. It looks at the
>
Could you use a tag cable? (there are other sources of the same thing.) We
use them for programming.
http://www.tag-connect.com/
Samtec makes header sockets that can come up through the bottom of the
board. We use those too.
SMD
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 3:50 PM, Kirk Wallace
wrote:
> I'm plan
I'm not sure exactly what you are aiming for, but I did something a little
while ago that I think is very similar.
I got the sockets that the pins fit into. They have a step in the outside
diameter. I laid out the upper board with holes that the entire socket
fits thru, and the lower board with
I just remembered that I had a detailed drawing of what I did. A
picture is worth a thousand words. See attached.
This was a test fixture for a small PC board. The main part of
the fixture was a board on the bottom, with short pins that
contacted the back of the board under test. The pogo pins
On 10/15/2014 02:06 PM, John Kasunich wrote:
> I just remembered that I had a detailed drawing of what I did. A
> picture is worth a thousand words. See attached.
... snip
Thank you Dennis and John. I didn't realize the pins are meant to be
used with sockets. The sockets offer some flexibility.
On 10/15/2014 02:50 PM, Kirk Wallace wrote:
> I'm planning on using these pins: http://www.ebay.com/itm/141233257616
> which are .053" in dia. with 5mm and .150" pitch.
>
> I would like to connect to the pogos with a connector rather than
> soldering a wire. I would like the connector to be between
The Axis Gui somewhere along the way lost the Machine Velocity display
apparently?
I think it might still be there but it may be black text on a black
background.
Does anyone have an idea how to fix this?
Under View, there is a show/don't show Machine Velocity selection, but
it doesn't work.
On Wednesday 15 October 2014 12:00:38 Sebastian Kuzminsky did opine
And Gene did reply:
> On 10/15/14 4:07 AM, Frank Tkalcevic wrote:
> > I was so annoyed that the estimates for my 3d printing jobs were so
> > far off (estimated 2 hours, took 8) that I modified the axis code.
> > It looks at the V
Yeah, I don't have the latest trajectory planner. 3d_chips was one of my
test files and came out ok without G64 settings.
Any suggestions on how to estimate with G64?
> -Original Message-
> From: Todd Zuercher [mailto:zuerc...@embarqmail.com]
> Sent: Thursday, 16 October 2014 3:16 AM
>
On Wednesday 15 October 2014 17:06:57 John Kasunich did opine
And Gene did reply:
> I just remembered that I had a detailed drawing of what I did. A
> picture is worth a thousand words. See attached.
>
> This was a test fixture for a small PC board. The main part of
> the fixture was a board on
I just used a standard IDC connector and a bit of PCB to keep the 0.1"
spacing...
http://www.franksworkshop.com.au/images/pogo_icp.jpg
> -Original Message-
> From: Kirk Wallace [mailto:kwall...@wallacecompany.com]
> Sent: Thursday, 16 October 2014 6:51 AM
> To: Enhanced Machine Controll
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