Results 11 to 20 of 22
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12-30-2014, 12:14 PM #11
- I'm curious to see the hardware your working with so that I may get a better understanding. Would you be able to snap/upload a few pics of your table, controllers, & motors (including inputs & wiring leading out of the devices)?
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12-31-2014, 06:29 AM #12
There are several possiblities. A easiest one that comes to mind is something that has been made for a printer that will use any gcode generator (Slic3r, Repetier-Host, Cura and so on).
This company (PrintRbot) offers their current revision at $100. http://printrbot.com/shop/printrboard-rev-f/
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12-31-2014, 08:13 AM #13
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That board is for stepper motors, not servos.
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01-02-2015, 10:07 AM #14
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01-04-2015, 05:11 PM #15
Mjolinor;
I looked up LinuxCNC and, as one would expect, it's not possible to run it on a Windows machine. From the LinuxCNC wiki (scroll to bottom):
"Why won't LinuxCNC run on Windows?
- LinuxCNC runs in real-time, to give smooth motion. This is critical to accuracy and machine life. Hard real-time is not available on Windows in a price range many can afford... especially those interested in using a PC-based control.
- LinuxCNC is intended to control machine tools. Machine tools are DANGEROUS and reliability/consistent behavior is extremely important. Compared to Windows, few viruses affect Linux. Even without consideration of viruses, Linux is far more stable.
- The above also apply to virtual machines (e.g., VMware or Virtual Box) and emulators. It may be possible to trick LinuxCNC to run on a virtual machine but do so at your own risk!
- The above notwithstanding, one can access a running LinuxCNC machine from a Windows machine, e.g., by running a Windows-based VNC client or X11 server."
This states that a dedicated Linux system is necessary. The Windows preferred alternative seems to be Mach3, but it's not free at $175. Do you advocate buying a dedicated system, devoted to Linux, over running Mach3 on a Windows machine, given that the costs are probably about equal? This question assumes, of course, that one doesn't already have a dedicated machine running Linux, as i expect most don't.
I suppose there is the alternative of partitioning a section of the hard drive to running Linux. What would you suggest?
- LinuxCNC runs in real-time, to give smooth motion. This is critical to accuracy and machine life. Hard real-time is not available on Windows in a price range many can afford... especially those interested in using a PC-based control.
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01-04-2015, 06:39 PM #16
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No point asking me what I suggest. I don't use anything by Micro$hite other than mice.
My Stratasys printer sits idle because it uses Windose and I don't.
Mach 3 is not really a Windows equivalent as it will not directly control things to the same extent. For your purposes either will do as you already have the rather expensive hardware that Mach3 requires.
You do not need to buy Mach3, the trial version will do everything you need, it is just limited in the lines of code it allows but it allows sufficient to prove viability before you spend anything.
I would go with another partition for Linux because if you meet a problem then you can get it fixed, the LinuxCNC community is very strong active and capable or do both, one should learn something new every day and if you do both you will be learning ten new things every day for 5 years.
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01-05-2015, 09:37 AM #17
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01-05-2015, 09:41 AM #18
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01-06-2015, 09:17 AM #19
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01-06-2015, 09:19 AM #20
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