How about sticking it in the Wiki under interesting examples?
I added the second set of Code Jeff provided above last night to the Oword
portion of the Wiki. I am certaily interesting in seeing it.
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 1:03 PM, Kenneth Lerman
wrote:
> Hey Ed,
>
> Once upon a time, I wrote so
Hey Ed,
Once upon a time, I wrote some gcode subroutines that, given the ends of
two lines and a radius, "makes" it into a line, an arc of that radius,
and a line.
If you want to see it, I might be able to locate it.
Regards,
Ken
Ed Nisley wrote:
>> if Ed will be continuing similar articles
>
>
>
> (- CUT HERE --)
> O100 sub (square [x0] [y0] [z0] [zr] [f1] [f2])
> (cut a 1x1 square)
> (#1 = z0 = depth of cut)
> (#2 = zr = retract after cut)
> (#3 = f1 = feed to cutting depth)
> (#4 = f
BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> it won't be real quick, but you could order that as a back issue.
>
>> Jon
>>
>
>
> Jon,
>
> Is it fair to say that the investment in this publication is worthwhile? If
> so, I am not opposed to giving it a try after the 1st of the year.
>
I may be a non-typical
Jim Register wrote:
> BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
>> it won't be real quick, but you could order that as a back issue.
>>> Jon
>>
>> Jon,
>>
>> Is it fair to say that the investment in this publication is worthwhile? If
>> so, I am not opposed to giving it a try after the 1st of the year.
>>
>
> Brian,
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 11:05:08PM -0500, BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> If I wanted to do multiples of a more complex part, could I simply do a
> coordinate shift in the O100 subroutine, execute lines of code, return to
> the global coordinate system and end that subroutine? It should reduce the
> number
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 12:09 AM, Jim Register wrote:
> BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> > it won't be real quick, but you could order that as a back issue.
> >> Jon
> >
> >
> > Jon,
> >
> > Is it fair to say that the investment in this publication is worthwhile?
> If
> > so, I am not opposed to giving it
BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> it won't be real quick, but you could order that as a back issue.
>> Jon
>
>
> Jon,
>
> Is it fair to say that the investment in this publication is worthwhile? If
> so, I am not opposed to giving it a try after the 1st of the year.
>
Brian,
Village Press usually has
it won't be real quick, but you could order that as a back issue.
>
> Jon
Jon,
Is it fair to say that the investment in this publication is worthwhile? If
so, I am not opposed to giving it a try after the 1st of the year.
Jeff,
Enjoying a brief warm spell here in PA so the opportunity was ta
BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> Seb,
>
> THanks for the link. I checked the site and I cannot seem to access any of
> the articles due to subscription requirements. Perhaps in the future I will
> explore this avenue, bit for the time being, Christmas preparations preclude
> spending on this.
>
it won't
You can grab a 'cheap' KVM from ebay, and a dumpster box to have a 'test
system' on your desk.
It may not be graceful, but if you can have the box in the workshop
running, you can use VNC on
your desktop inside to view what is going on there. I wouldn't really
CUT anything with it that way,
bu
You can also view that file, useful-subroutines.ngc, from the comfort of an
internet-connected computer:
http://cvs.linuxcnc.org/cvs/emc2/nc_files/useful-subroutines.ngc?rev=1.4;content-type=text%2Fplain
Jeff
--
SF.N
You might also look at the g code generators here
http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/emcinfo.pl?Simple_EMC_G-Code_Generators
and take a look at
http://www.linuxcnc.org/docview/html//gcode_main.html#sub:G92,-G92.1,-G92.2,
http://www.linuxcnc.org/docview/html//gcode_main.html#cha:O-Codes
John
On
Seb,
THanks for the link. I checked the site and I cannot seem to access any of
the articles due to subscription requirements. Perhaps in the future I will
explore this avenue, bit for the time being, Christmas preparations preclude
spending on this.
Jeff,
Thanks for the snippet of code. I w
Here's a program that does something like what you asked for.
You might also be interested in the file 'interesting-subroutines.ngc', which
should be installed in the examples directory.
Jeff
(- CUT HERE --)
O100 sub (square [x0] [y0] [z0]
BRIAN GLACKIN wrote:
> For simplicity, can someone show a looping routine to cut out a square 1" X
> 1" path (not worried about tooling offsets) then skip 1/2" on the Y axis and
> repeat. Once it reaches the end of the Y axis (24" in my case), I want it
> to index down the X axis and reverse on do
Up until now, I have been using AC2GC for gcode generation. While this is
ok, it gets tedious when I am generating multiples of a single part. I have
reviewed the Gcode manual numerous times and cannot get my mind wrapped
around the method for doing this. I reckon something along the line of a
d
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