trevj1
01-30-2007, 08:50 PM
Been having some greif with the Partner mill at work. IIRC it is equipped with a Centurion 4 control. Given that I have repeatedly seen references to the fact that it is no longer supported by Milltronics themselves, I have not bothered to bother them. I'll check tommorrow and add a post with the exact details of the machine.
(edit: It's a Partner 4 machine, with a centurion V controller. I figure to drop the folks a Milltronics a line tommorow if time permits)
Issue #1
Running at about 3k rpm and 25 inches per minute, when the feed was notched up one click, the screen blanked. Prior to this, I had a full stoppage in the middle of a program (3500 rpm, low feed rates, engraving a brass plaque with a 1/16 ball end mill) where the screen first went shades of green, then the screen quit, then the machine quit thinking.... At least it did not try to tunnel out through the table!
Shortage of power to the motherboard? AT power supplies (used ones at least) are cheap and available, but I am wondering if I am limited by the 600 watts that the 110 volt supply supposedly puts out.
Issue #2
Documentation. I have a Milltronics users manual (3 ring binder type of book, two copies of same.) a diskette marked "Parameters" and not much else.
Should I have any other software on disk? The machine is 386 based with a simdisk board. If it takes the long sleep, what are the odds that it goes to the scrap dealer?
There is a zero chance that this machine will see a control upgrade if it dies, and at the rate it is going, only a marginally higher chance that it would be replaced by another Milltronics machine when it does. Most likely is a fully enclosed VMC, and with the limited availability of ANY service techs these days, we will likely end up with something that can be serviced locally (at least, from Edmonton)
Circuit info? The manual we have, has a few diagrams showing more or less WHAT the cards are, though even that does not match up, as our machine is of different layout than shown, and does not appear to even have an I/O on the board to support a disk drive. To my knowledge, these manuals were supplied with the machine when new (1993 IIRC)
Trouble light interpretation? Are these things covered in a manual I am likley to find anywhere? All well and good that they put nice LEDs on the boards, but labels would have been cheap enough to add onto the print run of the circuit boards, I figure.
Issue #3
I have been able to run a couple parts that needed round features. I have had to rework most of them on a manual machine to bore them round.
I'm new to the whole CNC thing, but learning as fast as I can. I wish to check the backlash. Is it as straightforward as planting an indicator on a fixed point on the machine, and comparing notes between what it moved, and what it was supposed to? Is there a way that it can self check for backlash or movement errors? The machine is equipped with a set of scales. How does one check that the scales are working?
For that matter, just how accurate sould I expect the machine to be able to be? I was running about 4-6 thou out of round on the part that I last ran, on a 4 inch diameter. Feed rate on this was not very fast, like 12 ipm, on aluminum, with a sharp HSS cutter, climb milling.
#4 The non Issue!!
Our monitor crapped out a couple months ago. Turned out to be a good thing! The potting let go on the back of the picture tube. No loss!
When we opened up the controll box, we found that the monitor was running off a standard DB25 monitor cable, so we tried the one off our desktop. As that worked, we aquired a Philips 17 inch flatscreen and built a sheetmetal rack for it to mount over the original monitor on the control. MUCH better! About the only thing that could have improved things would have been a touchscreen!
Given the limited size of the screens, even on the new Cent 7 (A 12 inch is an "Oversized" monitor in their world???? Geez!) , I would do this mod in a heartbeat. Flatscreen LCDs are plenty easy to find,and plenty cheap. Mount kits are easy too.
Cheers
Trev
(edit: It's a Partner 4 machine, with a centurion V controller. I figure to drop the folks a Milltronics a line tommorow if time permits)
Issue #1
Running at about 3k rpm and 25 inches per minute, when the feed was notched up one click, the screen blanked. Prior to this, I had a full stoppage in the middle of a program (3500 rpm, low feed rates, engraving a brass plaque with a 1/16 ball end mill) where the screen first went shades of green, then the screen quit, then the machine quit thinking.... At least it did not try to tunnel out through the table!
Shortage of power to the motherboard? AT power supplies (used ones at least) are cheap and available, but I am wondering if I am limited by the 600 watts that the 110 volt supply supposedly puts out.
Issue #2
Documentation. I have a Milltronics users manual (3 ring binder type of book, two copies of same.) a diskette marked "Parameters" and not much else.
Should I have any other software on disk? The machine is 386 based with a simdisk board. If it takes the long sleep, what are the odds that it goes to the scrap dealer?
There is a zero chance that this machine will see a control upgrade if it dies, and at the rate it is going, only a marginally higher chance that it would be replaced by another Milltronics machine when it does. Most likely is a fully enclosed VMC, and with the limited availability of ANY service techs these days, we will likely end up with something that can be serviced locally (at least, from Edmonton)
Circuit info? The manual we have, has a few diagrams showing more or less WHAT the cards are, though even that does not match up, as our machine is of different layout than shown, and does not appear to even have an I/O on the board to support a disk drive. To my knowledge, these manuals were supplied with the machine when new (1993 IIRC)
Trouble light interpretation? Are these things covered in a manual I am likley to find anywhere? All well and good that they put nice LEDs on the boards, but labels would have been cheap enough to add onto the print run of the circuit boards, I figure.
Issue #3
I have been able to run a couple parts that needed round features. I have had to rework most of them on a manual machine to bore them round.
I'm new to the whole CNC thing, but learning as fast as I can. I wish to check the backlash. Is it as straightforward as planting an indicator on a fixed point on the machine, and comparing notes between what it moved, and what it was supposed to? Is there a way that it can self check for backlash or movement errors? The machine is equipped with a set of scales. How does one check that the scales are working?
For that matter, just how accurate sould I expect the machine to be able to be? I was running about 4-6 thou out of round on the part that I last ran, on a 4 inch diameter. Feed rate on this was not very fast, like 12 ipm, on aluminum, with a sharp HSS cutter, climb milling.
#4 The non Issue!!
Our monitor crapped out a couple months ago. Turned out to be a good thing! The potting let go on the back of the picture tube. No loss!
When we opened up the controll box, we found that the monitor was running off a standard DB25 monitor cable, so we tried the one off our desktop. As that worked, we aquired a Philips 17 inch flatscreen and built a sheetmetal rack for it to mount over the original monitor on the control. MUCH better! About the only thing that could have improved things would have been a touchscreen!
Given the limited size of the screens, even on the new Cent 7 (A 12 inch is an "Oversized" monitor in their world???? Geez!) , I would do this mod in a heartbeat. Flatscreen LCDs are plenty easy to find,and plenty cheap. Mount kits are easy too.
Cheers
Trev