Thread: Limits or homing switchs???
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25-03-2010 #1
I was planning to fit the limit switches to my machine this weekend but after reading on PMINMO's site that the best soulution is to use home switches instead and use the soft limits instead. (as you can then use the full travel of the bed as it wont have to back off the limit switch.)
Is this a good solution or is it best to still use limits as well?
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I've never needed limit switches, if the cut looks like it will go anywhere near 'max travel' I check for 'enough travel' before starting the cut.
A home switch is handy if you are worried about losing position. Whether you want to set it near the job or in a remote corner probably depends on how long the round trip is going to take
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26-03-2010 #3
cheers, so no limits or homing then just good planning before the job, makes sense i suppose.
Not sure I'm that confident yet, E-stop is a must tho?
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26-03-2010 #4
Hi Ross
I have both home and limits on my machine, but I must say after I set up the soft limits I have never hit a limit switch. If you are running servo's then I would still install limits as it would not be the first time a servo has gone AWOL which could do some serious damage.
Home switch is nice for repatability.
Andy
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26-03-2010 #5
What is the accuracy of homing switches as it would appear to me that if some form of micro switch is used then the position it switched at would vary depending on the direction you were homing from!
Can the homing be controlled so as to only happen in one direction, as micro switches have a thickness to the control arm.
Peter
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One solution is an opto slot phototransistor and a comparator. That has no hysteresis and doesn't impede the movement.
Problem is keeping it clean and dry
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26-03-2010 #7
Cheers everyone
I have both home and limits on my machine, but I must say after I set up the soft limits I have never hit a limit switch. If you are running servo's then I would still install limits as it would not be the first time a servo has gone AWOL which could do some serious damage.
Can the homing be controlled so as to only happen in one direction, as micro switches have a thickness to the control arm.
One solution is an opto slot phototransistor and a comparator. That has no hysteresis and doesn't impede the movement.
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27-03-2010 #8
I've got some magnetic sensors for mine, but I haven't got around to fitting them yet.
However, I am contemplating using a laser with a cross-hair generator on it, and visually aligning to a known point (which would be more than accurate for my needs).
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27-03-2010 #9I've got some magnetic sensors for mine, but I haven't got around to fitting them yet.
However, I am contemplating using a laser with a cross-hair generator on it, and visually aligning to a known point (which would be more than accurate for my needs).
Think I'll start with the home switches and soft limits, and work from there.
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27-03-2010 #10
theres a good thread on CNCZone about magentic hall effect devices...
i think if you used weak magnets (see the thread for reasons why) and mounted them at the limits and put the sensor on the moving part (yes i know it complicates things but means the 'sticky swarfy' bit is generally away from the cutting area...) then they could work well... and its cheap...
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