Jump to content

VitranAccad

Member
  • Posts

    1
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

VitranAccad's Achievements

  1. An odd topic that I am unsure if something people would be interested in here. It's techy. It allows you to interface servo motors with your computer. It makes machines come alive with potentially hundreds of IO to interface with the real world. It up-cycles old computers too. I am posting here because it seems like something Linus Tech Tips would be interested in in some sort of brief discussion, but not something to seriously look at. If someone wanted to make a VR chair, a full servo 3D printer, a robot arm, or something similar, this would be a great tool to use. LinuxCNC* (http://linuxcnc.org/) is a DIY CNC program for CAD/CAM. People have used this program and equipment to rebuild CNC machines weighing tens of thousands of pounds to making their own custom 3D printer. It's capability is large and is (relatively) easy to use compared to other industrial cards and programs. I would hail it as one of the best open-source programs to come out of the community behind Blender and Inkscape. I will also say I am not an expert in the full details about LinuxCNC, but I have used it to rebuild a Hardinge Superslant CNC lathe. A true expert would be someone named AndyPugh on the LinuxCNC Forum. https://forum.linuxcnc.org/ The program runs on Linux, and has a ready-to-install CD running Debian. It can run on any old PC and if the computer has a parallel port it can be used to control a plotter, laser cutter, or XY gantry. If anyone has used GRBL on an Arduino, this is a massive step up. However, where LinuxCNC really shines is its interface with Mesa. Mesa cards are ~$300USD and connect via a PCI or PCIe port to allow rapid communication to perform closed loop controls on servo drives. You can custom program in Ladder, C, and other methods if required. Mesa cards are made by PCW, and he is also a big member of the LinuxCNC forum. My latest LinuxCNC project was a Hardinge Superlant 3 Axis. It is a production CNC lathe that I purchased for $3k, however I have seen similar CNC machines go for $1 as companies want you to pay for the rigging to get rid of it (rigging cost me $900) and the number of people capable of taking an old machine like this are rare. I learned a lot about how data and communication is performed, as well as how motion control is done in the production of this machine. I am also looking at swapping out our other machine, a Deckel FP50CC/T, with LinuxCNC as well. The control case. A nightmare, I know. And yes, the computer is held in with a shoelace. My CNC used a Mesa 7i77 and a 7i64 to have enough IO to control the machine, and even then, I have 0 spare. I should have gotten more. They were from here: http://store.mesanet.com/index.php?route=product/product&path=69_73&product_id=214 http://store.mesanet.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=120&search=7i77 http://store.mesanet.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=110&search=7i64 *used to be known as EMC and may be referred to as such
×