On Tuesday 12 February 2008, wp wrote:
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send it to you.
I have version 19 of BobCad.
Wayne
\
Humm, that sounds like a potential copyright problem, so I'll skip. I may be
able to find something in a
wp wrote:
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send it to you.
I have version 19 of BobCad.
Wayne
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, Jon Elson wrote:
Is that something I could extract and use elsewhere Jon?
The first time the compiler comes across the function it doesn't know
the prototype, so it assumes that it returns an int. Then when it comes
across the function declaration it is different.
The type of a function is defined by the return type and the parameter
types which must always match
On Tue, 2008-02-12 at 15:36 -0700, Andrew Ayre wrote:
The first time the compiler comes across the function it doesn't know
the prototype, so it assumes that it returns an int. Then when it comes
across the function declaration it is different.
The type of a function is defined by the
Okay, I answered my own question with a little research.
Here's one:
Documentation for PlotFont -
http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/plotutils/plotutils_27.html
Part of a larger package PlotUtils - (Docs) -
http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/plotutils/plotutils.html#SEC_Top
Source -
Does someone have suggestions on how to set up the config for a HobbyCNC
driver board?
Thanks ...
-
This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft
Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2008.
With the experience I have gained so far, it leads me to believe that
you are making choices that may make your quest more difficult. If you
are trying to have a CNC machine to make parts and spend as little as
appropriate for that end, then you should consider studying other
machines that
Hi,
I you can make this work then it is clearly open
http://tulrich.com/fonts/#20070211
Dave
On Feb 12, 2008, at 12:56 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, wp wrote:
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send
At the risk of letting everyone know I am a C newbie. Oh ... you already
know?
I am getting:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/emc2/Modbus$ gcc -o modbus-1c modbus-1c.c
modbus-1c.c:75: error: conflicting types for 'CRC16'
modbus-1c.c:28: error: previous implicit declaration of 'CRC16' was here
[EMAIL
On Tue, 12 Feb 2008, wp wrote:
John personally that font is such a piece of crap I wouldn't want it
anyway.as for copyright.. I have no idea and that thought never
crossed my mind. I think that there are much better and openly
available fonts other than in BobCad I can not get
John personally that font is such a piece of crap I wouldn't want it
anyway.as for copyright..
I have no idea and that thought never crossed my mind. I think that
there are much better and
openly available fonts other than in BobCad I can not get that
font to open even with a .FNT
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send it to you.
I have version 19 of BobCad.
Wayne
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, Jon Elson wrote:
Is that something I could extract and use elsewhere Jon?
On Tue, 2008-02-12 at 13:39 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just a quickie.
Can anyone recommend a UK supplier of stepper motors and associated drive
electronics?
eg just add mill, and computer running EMC.
Mill is a light / middleweight Pinnacle universal job, XYZ travels are 400,
Dave
I've got motors and drivers from http://www.motioncontrolproducts.com and
was very pleased with price, service and range of choice.
Good luck
Andy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just a quickie.
Can anyone recommend a UK supplier of stepper motors and associated drive
electronics?
eg just
On Tue, 2008-02-12 at 22:42 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
With the experience I have gained so far, it leads me to believe that
you are making choices that may make your quest more difficult. If you
are trying to have a CNC machine to make parts and spend as little as
appropriate for
The function CRC16 is used before it is declared.
Either move the definition of CRC16 to before main, or declare it separately
prior to its use.
I notice that you are using (very) old style declarations in that code.
Modern coders would write:
unsigned short CRC16(unsigned char *puchMsg,
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008, Jon Elson wrote:
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008, Jon Elson wrote:
I have used Bobcad for this. Even an old version will work
fine. It can take any True-Type font on your system and use
that. I hacked up their internal vector
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, wp wrote:
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send it to you.
I have version 19 of BobCad.
Wayne
\
Humm, that sounds like a potential copyright problem, so I'll skip. I may be
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.arceurotrade.co.uk/Catalogue/Stepper-Motors
The 180Ncm will be big enough, and at ?18.50 at the moment ...
The 3 Amp driver at ?28.95 each are a good option for driving them, so for
under ?150 you have all the grunt.
They will run direct off the parallel
http://www.arceurotrade.co.uk/Catalogue/Stepper-Motors
The 180Ncm will be big enough, and at ?18.50 at the moment ...
The 3 Amp driver at ?28.95 each are a good option for driving them, so for
under ?150 you have all the grunt.
They will run direct off the parallel port, but a simple
http://www.arceurotrade.co.uk/Catalogue/Stepper-Motors
The 180Ncm will be big enough, and at ?18.50 at the moment ...
The 3 Amp driver at ?28.95 each are a good option for driving them, so for
under ?150 you have all the grunt.
They will run direct off the parallel port, but a simple
Aram,
measuring torque on an AC servos is definitely possible.
It is not as simple as measuring current but this does give some feedback.
I don't think that the current used by the servo drivers is a measure
but you try Stan's setup that way.
There are servo drivers with force-feedback but I
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just a quickie.
Can anyone recommend a UK supplier of stepper motors and associated drive
electronics?
eg just add mill, and computer running EMC.
Mill is a light / middleweight Pinnacle universal job, XYZ travels are 400,
180, 150 mm with
quill head having
I got mine from at the model engineer ex
http://www.arceurotrade.co.uk/Catalogue/Stepper-Motors in Leicester
and seems they have some even cheaper since I bought mine
Dave Caroline
archivist on #emc FreeNode
-
This SF.net
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, Ian W. Wright wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008, Ian W. Wright wrote:
For those who were fascinated by the polygon turning have a look at this
- http://tinyurl.com/2wqbvl , it achieves the same ends but without any
extra power or synchronisation of spindle and
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, Brian Pitt wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008 15:14, Gene Heskett wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008, Ian W. Wright wrote:
For those who were fascinated by the polygon turning have a look at this
- http://tinyurl.com/2wqbvl , it achieves the same ends but without any
Just a quickie.
Can anyone recommend a UK supplier of stepper motors and associated drive
electronics?
eg just add mill, and computer running EMC.
Mill is a light / middleweight Pinnacle universal job, XYZ travels are 400,
180, 150 mm with
quill head having separate raise / lower facility and
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, John Kasunich wrote:
Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 12 February 2008, wp wrote:
Gene,
The Bobcad font is in the .FNT format if you can use it send me an
email off list and I will send it to you.
I have version 19 of BobCad.
Wayne
\
Humm, that sounds like a
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