Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread Chris Morley
> Now I have 2 questions: > 1) what is "rung"? A rung is the area between the horizontal bars. One 'screen', 6 lines (in Classicladder's case) > 2) can I make larger that piece of "section display" in which I can > draw the ladder logics? now it consists of several blocks and it seems > pretty

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread John Thornton
A "rung" is the network from the left rail to the right rail which may include branches if you click on a section and with the editor open click on delete you will delete one "rung". The section display ("rung") appears to be fixed at 6 high On 8/18/2012 1:30 PM, Viesturs Lācis wrote: > 2012/8/

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread Viesturs Lācis
2012/8/18 John Thornton : > It's hard to describe here but I'll try... sounds like you need a timer > and based on the value of the timer you assign a value to your output > pin. you have to arrange your rungs... this would be so much easier on > the forum I could upload a screenshot... > Thanks!

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread John Thornton
It's hard to describe here but I'll try... sounds like you need a timer and based on the value of the timer you assign a value to your output pin. you have to arrange your rungs... this would be so much easier on the forum I could upload a screenshot... John 8/18/2012 11:08 AM, Viesturs Lācis

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread Viesturs Lācis
2012/8/18 John Thornton : > > The variable assignment along with your input logic should work. > > http://linuxcnc.org/docs/html/ladder/classic_ladder.html#_variable_assignment Thanks! I already found that part. The question is: Can I assign different values to _one and the same_ s32 output pin?

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread John Thornton
If you don't load your ladder at start up it won't be there... The variable assignment along with your input logic should work. http://linuxcnc.org/docs/html/ladder/classic_ladder.html#_variable_assignment On 8/18/2012 10:44 AM, Viesturs Lācis wrote: > 2012/8/18 John Thornton : >> Are you loadin

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread Viesturs Lācis
2012/8/18 John Thornton : > Are you loading the user part of classicladder? > > loadusr classicladder --nogui hardinge.clp > I have only these 2 lines in HAL: loadrt classicladder_rt addf classicladder.0.refresh servo-thread I can open Ladder editor from LinuxCNC menu. I think that I found the s

Re: [Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread John Thornton
Are you loading the user part of classicladder? loadusr classicladder --nogui hardinge.clp John On 8/18/2012 7:34 AM, Viesturs Lācis wrote: > Hello! > > I started to work on config for the machine I am building and I am now > stuck with figuring out, how to properly set up material pushers. > I

Re: [Emc-users] solder paste

2012-08-18 Thread Erik Friesen
It seems to me like solder paste is going to separate under any pressure differential without some special design or consideration to keep the paste together. On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 7:34 AM, andy pugh wrote: > On 18 August 2012 13:18, wrote: > > I found a high pressure pump (up to 40,000PSI)

[Emc-users] Ladder question

2012-08-18 Thread Viesturs Lācis
Hello! I started to work on config for the machine I am building and I am now stuck with figuring out, how to properly set up material pushers. I decided that I might try out classicladder. In HAL file I have: loadrt classicladder_rt addf classicladder.0.refresh servo-thread In LinuxCNC window I

Re: [Emc-users] solder paste

2012-08-18 Thread andy pugh
On 18 August 2012 13:18, wrote: > I found a high pressure pump (up to 40,000PSI) that may work with solder > paste. These are readily available on ebay as high pressure liquid > chromatography (HPLC) pumps. A description is here: > http://www.lcresources.com/resources/getstart/2b01.htm I s

Re: [Emc-users] solder paste

2012-08-18 Thread ceenbot
I found a high pressure pump (up to 40,000PSI) that may work with solder paste. These are readily available on ebay as high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) pumps. A description is here: http://www.lcresources.com/resources/getstart/2b01.htm Even if a standard Waters style pump has geom