I was also confused by machine kit reference from tormach. I thought tormach was based on linuxcnc and not the machine kit branch/fork
although I guess if Tormach are running a 2.7 linuxcnc version I guess you could say they have their own branch/fork I would have thought that since the change to python 3 with linuxcnc that will be quite a divergent change to linuxcnc that will make it difficult to integrate any items pushed back to 2.7 On Wed, 5 Jan 2022, 18:38 John Dammeyer, <[email protected]> wrote: > > From: Chris Albertson [mailto:[email protected]] > > > > On Wed, Jan 5, 2022 at 3:29 AM Gregg Eshelman via Emc-users < > > [email protected]> wrote: > > > > > That repeatability is plenty good enough to drop work into an automatic > > > holding fixture (which does the final precision positioning) then pick > the > > > pieces out for transfer to another manufacturing stage or into a box. > > > > > > > > As it turns out, for all the really hard tasks, +/- a quarter-inch > (0.25") > > is accurate enough. You only need 0.001 inches for the simple no-brain > > jobs. So my point is that you can do a LOT with the cheaper 3D printed > > plastic version of this robot. > > > > I'm surprised there are not more people here working on robots. hey are > > very much like CNC tools but more interesting. > > > > I'm headed in that direction once I get the power drawbar working to my > satisfaction. I had considered using one of the Size24 Steppers with 50:1 > planetary drives to replace the butterfly impact wrench. Easy enough to > track turns with an encoder on the back of the motor and let it stall when > target torque is reached with software control of motor torque. Then to > remove use full torque for required number of turns. > > Then the tool changer. To me a robot arm seemed more useful since I'm > using TTS and R8 tooling. Lining up the R8 is possible because the spindle > has step/dir so the spindle could be rotated until the R8 tool slips up the > key. > > Anyway, my Ball Bearing Jacobs Chuck with R8 weighs in at 1.7kg without > tooling so I think a 3D printed version of this arm is probably just a bit > undersize along with the planetary gearboxes not being 0 backlash. > > You're right. His software is minimal but still the entire project as > open source is impressive. Few people are doing it to that level even if > he's earning income off the metalwork and part sets which comes to over $1k > if you buy his metal and bearing and parts sets along with the > StepperOnline motors and gearboxes. > > But still it's interesting other than I'd much rather dedicated a Pi4 and > LCNC to it. With no idea where to start since I don’t' even know what > ROS2 is and am confused as to why Tormach is using the MachineKit version > instead of LCNC. I thought MachineKit had stalled and was no longer used. > > John > > > > > _______________________________________________ > 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
