One other thing, I would also suggest you disable "Idle current reduction" on your controller board if that is an option. I was on the HCNC list for quite some time and many people had strange issues when idle current reduction was enabled, apparently the driver chips also have that "feature" built in and the two different implementations don't play well together.
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:21 AM, Damian Slavek <[email protected]> wrote: > I would suggest checking this page: > http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/emcinfo.pl?Stepper_Drive_Timing > > It only has the HCNC pro listed but I believe they use the same driver > chips. > > I have the HCNC Pro and have not seen the issues you mention, although like > Terry already mentioned, stepconf uses inches per second, not inches per > minute. That was my only gotcha when setting up. > > On Sun, Jul 5, 2009 at 2:25 PM, Jeffrey Pease <[email protected]> wrote: > >> I am working on tuning my homebuilt HobbyCNC machine with EMC 2.3. I >> am using the HobbyCNC EZ driver board to interface with my PC. I have >> things working, but am working on tweaking the ini settings to get as >> high of feedrate as I can reliably. >> >> One mysterious issue I've seen that I'm trying to figure out is that >> very, very rarely, a movement command to the milling machine will make >> an axis move the correct distance in the INCORRECT direction. This can >> happen either when running a gcode program or manually jogging the >> axis in a direction. If it occurs during a jog, usually all I have to >> do to fix it is stop jogging and then start again. >> >> The computer interfaces with the driver board using the normal STEP, >> DIRECTION signals for each axis over the parallel port. >> >> The question is, where do you think this issue is being introduced? It >> seems unlikely that EMC2 could be getting the direction wrong in >> isolated cases, but, to me, it seems equally unlikely that the driver >> board is driving a particular direction incorrectly in isolated cases. >> This might also be a symptom of operating at too high of a feedrate >> (in the current case I have been trying to make 40 inches per second >> work), but I'm hoping to hear from someone who has seen and fixed this >> issue before I try dropping the feedrate. Like I say, this issue crops >> maybe .05% of the time - very rare, but enough to affect the overall >> reliability of my machine. >> >> Any ideas? >> >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> _______________________________________________ >> Emc-users mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users >> > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users
