> > Go for it. If you design the board the LinuxCNC developers would be very
> > willing to help you integrate it with LinuxCNC. Of course you'll have to
> > be able to produce it at a price that makes it attractive to buyers.
> >
> 
> No.  do not produce yet another board.   You want to use an existing one.
> There are so many in the under $20 range and even under $5.

Tried to provide the best help I had time for to someone yesterday working with 
NML. You could start there, once it is split so that it works over the network 
it should possible to put on one of these readily available cards. Tried to 
split once and think old TK worked but not new axis. Agree, use an existing 
board.

You have looked at how the different parts in Linuxcnc communicate?


> Any STM32 based development board can connect to a Linux PC using USB, SPI
> I2C or whatever then the board will have a dozen or two or more pins.  It
> will also have some useful hardware for making pulses and such.

They are really good and might work as is. Also use a lot less space than an 
old PC/laptop and are most probably also cheaper though in a lot of cases space 
for a computer is not an issue.


Regards Nicklas Karlsson


_______________________________________________
Emc-users mailing list
Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users

Reply via email to