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10-08-2017 #1
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10-08-2017 #2
Guy's,
I was just about to ask a similar question so thanks for the information. Could I go a step further (no pun intended!) and ask for a recommendation for a MC. There are so many option Ive spent 2 day on eBay and am still confused.
I have a lathe/Mill so I want X,Y and Z stepper motors for sure and I wouldn't mind 1 spare channel for my rotary table.
I guess I will need some limit / home switch inputs.
I have a variable speed drive on the machine already so I need an output to that.
I would line to maintain the ability to thread so I think I need a couple of inputs for tacho position sensors.
Im just getting to grips with Autodesk Inventor, but haven't got a preference on Mach3 or LinuxCNC as a controller so open to suggestions / recommedations on that also.
Thanks in advance,
Ian.
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10-08-2017 #3
Given those requirements, you're looking at 4-axis + the spindle. Depending on the motion controller, they may give a PWM option or dedicated 0-10V output, but if not, you'll need 5-axis combined with a step/dir to 0-10V interface.
The fact you need threading, eliminates quite a few controllers.
On the Windows side, starting at the cheaper end, I'd suggest looking at PMDX (best check on threading support, as I'm not 100% they support it yet), PoKeys, KFlop, SmoothStepper, and CS-Labs CSMIO-IP-A or S (M doesn't support threading), but you need to add an ENC module to support threading.
LinuxCNC, you need to compare the MESA options.Avoiding the rubbish customer service from AluminiumWarehouse since July '13.
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10-08-2017 #4
Many thanks for the comprehensive reply Neale - I think that it might be well worth me thinking about a motion controller.
This learning curve can be quite expensive by the time you've understood what's needed and why. A friend has a lot of experience with Mach3 and builds small machines for clockmaking - he's a very competent and experienced engineer with a great deal of knowledge in this area. He advised fitting a couple of parallel ports to the PC, cleared off all the old software and helped with the initial (re)motorising of my machine. Pretty early on he realised that the approach he'd taken on his little machines wasn't going to be up to the sort of thing I have.
Abandoning the parallel ports and moving to a ethernet MC sounds like a sound move.
Thanks again Boyan for your very sensible suggestions. We have already dumped lots of domestic software "sludge" that was slowing the machine down. I'll take a look at the energy saving settings etc.
Just as I've concluded that I need servos rather than steppers, I've slowly arrived at the conclusion that a motion controller would be a good idea - buying the wrong sort of servo drivers may have inadvertently done me a favour.
I am already thinking that the Fehlmann mill that I'm working on is going to be a compromise compared to something like a Deckel FP2NC or some other quality first generation NC machine from the 80s. As I understand it most of these old machines used analogue servos so getting some experience with them now will be an advantage.
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10-08-2017 #5
Fwiw..
If You are working on a fehlmann..
which is a high-value machine - top of the range -
I would definitely recommend ac brushless servos and a csmio controller.
A motion controller provides much smoother pulses, and at much higher step rates, than other options.
But..
All the high-speed stuff is then dependent on the motion controller, and thus their sw/fw/plugin support is critical.
This applies to high accuracy servos, high accuracy homing, high accuracy probing, etc.
Servos, modern, have 5-10k counts/rev.
Thus, at 50 r/sec, = 3000 rpm, = 500 kHz.
Very few systems support this.
A csmio basic does 256 khz.
It might be fine.
And supports 4 axis.
But..
I think it does not support rigid tapping as-is.
Not sure, check with cslabs.
If this rigid/tapping does not matter, that would be Your best solution, today, imo, ime.
If You want a Really Good solution, get a CSMIO-IP-S or IP-A.
I use IP-S on a lathe, industrial, servos, very happy.
If You want a Really Good solution cheap, get a Pokeys Ethernet board.
Low cost, excellent sw, support, hw.
Limited to 125 kHz, mostly wont matter imo, ime, for the speed.
Mach = 125 kHz but I think Mach4 is higher speed.
6 axis.
And *excellent* MPG support.
I would recommend against anything else, especially usb, exception machmotion and other industrial stuff, I have never heard anything negative about.
So those c/would likely also work really well- no personal experience.
A smart read is that I am not mentioning some popular hobby controllers - some that I have. There Is a Reason.
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10-08-2017 #6
Thanks for the reply. I think I'm going to heading along the LCNC route (I'm going to give it a go at least). I've been put off up to know by the lack of a clear guide that assumes no experience of CNC (like the very good Mach3 manuals), but a number of people including Clive S have encouraged me to persist and give it a go.
I recently mistakenly bought some analogue servo drivers (very cheaply) which I'm really impressed with after powering them up and running them from the manufacturers control software. Given how easy and relatively inexpensive it is to buy a Pico Systems DA converter card that will run straight off LCNC it makes sense to give that pathway a go. So to some extent the motion controller issue isn't so important to me now.Last edited by Agathon; 10-08-2017 at 11:21 PM.
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11-08-2017 #7
You might want to consider UCCNC, which does do rigid tapping. I'd recommend a UC300ETH controller and UB1 breakout board.
http://www.cncroom.com/index.php?mai...roducts_id=223
Not as cheap as LinuxCNC setup, but a lot easier to use, imo.Gerry
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