There are many options nowadays. The aforementioned PlanetCNC, FlashCut, EdingCNC, MicroKinetics... I personally prefer the EdingCNC interface. With most all control software you can download the demo and see if it fits the way you work...
The smooth stepper takes the parallel port out of the equation on the computer side. It connects to the computer\laptop via a usb port or the Ethernet port depending on which version you get. The smooth stepper has ports that connect to the parallel port on the BoB on the back of your machine. It also lets you run on 32 or 64 bit versions of windows.
For my machine, I'm using an 2005 era XP machine that has a parallel port. but I was getting a weird pulse that made the stepper motors jerk while moving, sometimes even stalling the motors. I got it down to a minimum but it was still there. Once I got the smooth stepper and it went away!
Andrew
There are many options nowadays. The aforementioned PlanetCNC, FlashCut, EdingCNC, MicroKinetics... I personally prefer the EdingCNC interface. With most all control software you can download the demo and see if it fits the way you work...
This makes more sense. I didn't know if the smooth stepper worked with the parallel port or alone.
Looks like I will be on the lookout for a decent computer with a parallel port and start experimenting with the free version of mach3.
I picked up a rig to run this.
Desktop Unit
32 bit Windows 7
2.2 ghz processing
2 gigs ram
Video card
Parallel Port
18" thin monitor
Mouse, keyboard, etc
<$100
Should fit the bill for what Mach3 needs and was a nice cheap package. Will be starting to play with it this weekend. Any good beginner videos/tutorials for mach3 online?
Yes, the first few tutorial videos here will be a big help.
ArtSoft USA - Video Tutorials
Hoss
Gosh, you've... really got some nice toys here. - Roy Batty -- [URL]http://www.g0704.com[/URL]
The 2 National Instrument cards look like 68 pin SCSI cards. One is PCI, and I suspect the other is a backplane card for some sort of server with 4 disk drives.
I doubt they will be of any use to you.
I made it a fair way through the intro videos, but at this point I am spending all my time building my car.
Anyone in the Milwaukee area I can pay to spend a day setting this up for me?
Is there a general setup for the HobbyCNC PRO Chopper Driver Board and Mach 3?
I'm not sure how good a performance you'll get with a HobbyCNC board... As they're unipolar boards, you're not utilizing the full coil of the stepper thus your torque will be lower than a bipolar drive. There is less inductance however so you may have higher torque at higher speeds, but that may not be necessarily good depending on the spindle speed and what you are machining. You may find higher torque at lower speeds more beneficial. Also you need a 5, 6, or 8 wire stepper, but you can use them with both drives. A 4 wire stepper will only work in a bipolar drive, unless you disassemble the stepper and tap one coil (NOT recommended!)
Well, good news I found someone using the Hobby CNC board and copied their settings into Mach3. Pulled up the mpg and got it moving!
To be on the safe side I am trying to set up my boundaries, but my steps must be way off. I go over an inch and it thinks I am going over 26".
Any good tutorials on how to calibrate this?
Video -
I am in inches.
I believe the calibration is just way off.
It sounds like the person who set up the XML file you copied set his machine up in inches, but your machine thinks it's in mm. So it's possible the "steps/unit" settings in Config/motor tuning are off by a factor of 25.4. Either that, or you need to give the machine a G20 command (in MDI) to put it back into inch operation.
[FONT=Verdana]Andrew Werby[/FONT]
[URL="http://www.computersculpture.com/"]Website[/URL]