On Thursday 23 February 2017 23:14:37 Kurt Jacobson wrote:
> Gene, my MPG works great. Does not have any lag at all. The 400ppr did
> throw me off at first when the machine jogged four times the jog
> scale. I put a fix for that in the MPG comp I wrote, it just divides
> the jog scale by whatever
On 23/02/17 21:38, Ralph Stirling wrote:
> FreeCAD is nice for 3d work, but Draftsight is my go-to for 2d.
The FreeCad drafting desktop has been improving ... and the other
specialist workbenches are unique ... anybody for a boat hull ... but I
still use Turbocad for a quick drawing. One has to
I use AutoDesk's "Fusion360". It's free for most of us. Of course it
will open AutoDesk's DXF file format.
AutoDesk has gone a 180 degree turn on pricing making a premiere CAD/CAM
program free. Fusion360 should be popular with anyone doing CNC work.
It allows one to make 3D models and then
On Thursday 23 February 2017 22:44:19 Jon Elson wrote:
> On 02/23/2017 08:31 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > But I think its something we may be able to outwit in the hal file.
> >
> > They appear to have a power save shutdown, and a power up lag.
> >
> > And seem to have timings independent from
On 24 February 2017 at 10:44, Gene Heskett wrote:
> But every scheme I come up demands the encoder be restored to
> zero on the button release before the accumulated count can make the
> machine move wildly.
LinuxCNC handles that. No need to zero the counts.
Wheel-jogging
On Friday 24 February 2017 00:08:42 Chris Albertson wrote:
> I don't think it works this way. It does not power down. But it
> does work exactly as per the specification. There are 100 detented
> divisions per revolution. The A and B phase of course only change
> when there is movement.
>
>
On Friday 24 February 2017 05:53:35 andy pugh wrote:
> On 24 February 2017 at 10:44, Gene Heskett
wrote:
> > But every scheme I come up demands the encoder be restored to
> > zero on the button release before the accumulated count can make the
> > machine move wildly.
>
>
>Draftsight is a free (but not open source) clone of Autocad (by the
>maker of Solidworks) that works pretty well on Linux (64 bit). You
>have to renew it every year, but I've found it to be pretty good. I
>like the UI for it better than LibreCAD.
I use Draftsight a lot, but the latest versions
>What I'd like is a 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 5.0 etc gain sequence,
>extended another decade both directions.
I like this idea a lot, I've been thinking along similar lines. I don't
understand why every CNC controller uses 10x increments.
On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 4:32 AM, Ron Bean wrote:
>
> I've used Fusion360 but I'm still not used to the idea of using a 3D CAD
> program to draw an inherently 2D part. I'll get there eventually.
>
You just make a sketch on one plane. Using it this way it is
On 02/24/2017 05:04 PM, dragon wrote:
> Copley has a data sheet available for the 513 but it does nothing more
> than mention the internal header. I contacted them and they said that
> they are unable to help out with anything that old.
>
> Does anyone have info on the internal header that is used
On Friday 24 February 2017 07:34:16 Ron Bean wrote:
> >What I'd like is a 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 5.0 etc gain sequence,
> >extended another decade both directions.
>
> I like this idea a lot, I've been thinking along similar lines. I
> don't understand why every CNC controller uses 10x
On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 9:54 AM, Stephen Dubovsky wrote:
> ARM has over 80 licensees for just the Cortex family. Atmel has... only
> themselves. If you are going to invest the time & money to setup and
> develop for a chip, not just for a current project but unknown future
On Friday 24 February 2017 09:54:13 Stephen Dubovsky wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 23, 2017 at 9:47 PM, Erik Christiansen
> wrote:
> ...
>
> > Conversely, why is the ATtiny15
> > "best" for the job at hand? Answer: Because it has a few ADC
> > channels, I have a few of them in my
On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 6:54 AM, Stephen Dubovsky
wrote:
>
> Indeed support is VERY useful. There are many more ARM forums (and
> professional users) then Arduino.
That is an odd thing to say because Arduino is moving to ARM.
Tool chains used to be such a big deal.
I have several brandsĀ of MCU with Arduino being one. I am wondering if anyone
on the list has tried a Parallax Propeller for any cnc type app. It ha 8 - 32
bit processors called cogs.Robert
--
Check out
If you have to use on chip peripherals such as DMA, ADC, or PWM you very
much have to "learn a chip" (some are part of the core, some are part of
the silicon manufacturer implementation.) An Arduino OS will sield you
from much of that but if doing more bare metal implementation or even
running a
On Thu, Feb 23, 2017 at 9:47 PM, Erik Christiansen
wrote:
...
> Conversely, why is the ATtiny15
> "best" for the job at hand? Answer: Because it has a few ADC channels, I
> have a few of them in my goodies box, AND I'm set up to develop with
> them.
That last one is
Copley has a data sheet available for the 513 but it does nothing more
than mention the internal header. I contacted them and they said that
they are unable to help out with anything that old.
Does anyone have info on the internal header that is used for some of
the settings, and the equations or
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