On 8 May 2016, at 04:49, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Greetings all;
>
> Trying to hold a 10" diamond saw blade yesterday, tight enough to keep it
> from slipping, I striped out the 6mm threads in my arbor.
>
> So today I bored it gently out to around .230" or 15/64's and re-tapped
> that to 7mm x1.
On 05/07/2016 11:35 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> The only problem I've had with just moving the drive, is
> convincing udev to leave the name of the eth0 port the
> hell alone. Everytime you move the drive to a different
> box, it thinks the discovered ethernet port(s) are new,
This will also happe
Greetings all;
Trying to hold a 10" diamond saw blade yesterday, tight enough to keep it
from slipping, I striped out the 6mm threads in my arbor.
So today I bored it gently out to around .230" or 15/64's and re-tapped
that to 7mm x1.0. It wasn't until I was cleaning that up that I
realized I
The white PCIe x16 slot is only hooked up as an x4. 16 gig max RAM is good.
http://www.hp.com/ctg/Manual/c01549447.pdf
From: Andrew
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
Sent: Saturday, May 7, 2016 1:08 AM
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Appropriate PCs
A year back someone recommended
Am Samstag, 7. Mai 2016 schrieb andy pugh:
> On 7 May 2016 at 09:39, Nicklas Karlsson
> wrote:
>
> > I have an old server intel Xeon, it is used as a server and I did not try
> > real time kernel yet.
>
>
> I have been running an old Xeon server on my lathe for several years now.
> It's just ab
On 7 May 2016 at 22:10, John Alexander Stewart wrote:
> Homing the lathe at headstock end seems like it would be courting disaster.
It probably depends on the lathe. It is safe with my Chinese lathe,
but looks like it isn't with the Holbrook.
Putting a useful limit in looks to be the hard part.
Anyone one want to see the first test? (Not cutting the parts, testing the
assembled parts)
--
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Andy;
I rejected that idea on the previous lathe because of the tailstock.
> I hadn't considered it on this lathe but it might be the answer. I
> just have to remember to move the tailstock out of the way.
>
I expect to put an estop switch on my tailstock, and home close to the
"tailstock end" of
On 7 May 2016 at 13:29, John Thornton wrote:
> You don't home away from the chuck?
I rejected that idea on the previous lathe because of the tailstock.
I hadn't considered it on this lathe but it might be the answer. I
just have to remember to move the tailstock out of the way.
>
> I'm guessing m
You might give Clonezilla a try. Burn it to a USB drive, Boot from that
drive then generate an image on another USB, hard drive, or whatever.
Checkout clonezilla.org for details. It can also work over a network, but
the devil is in the details, as always.
The resultant drive should be bootable
http://93x57r.se/tecno-cnc/documents/CNC3000/Blomqvist-S%20CNC%20page4.pdf
This how it is done on my Lathe.
Fixed Limit at the far end from chuck, adjustable Home and movable Limit
closest to chuck.
1 switch NC handles Limit and Home.
Bengt
Den 2016-05-07 kl. 18:43, skrev Dave Caroline:
> It
It mostly gets in the way so is usually off the bed.
Dave
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your
On Saturday 07 May 2016 11:34:28 Danny Miller wrote:
> So as per previous thread, I may be moving this to another PC. And
> probably change to an SSHD.
>
> I spent a ridiculous amount of time getting the OS and LinuxCNC RT
> installed and configured. And I didn't do all of it myself so it's
> no
> ...
> How reliable is it to just copy the entire installation to a new drive
> on a new (different) machine?
A convenient tool or method for creating an image of the whole installation (OS
and LinuxCNC) and packing it up is probably the choice then installing several
computers of the same kin
On 05/07/2016 10:34 AM, Danny Miller wrote:
> So as per previous thread, I may be moving this to another PC. And
> probably change to an SSHD.
>
> I spent a ridiculous amount of time getting the OS and LinuxCNC RT
> installed and configured. And I didn't do all of it myself so it's not
> a straig
On Saturday 07 May 2016 08:35:02 Dave Caroline wrote:
> The denford starturn has the switch on the saddle and a sliding member
> gripping the bed just visible under the chuck to the rear
> http://www.collection.archivist.info/archive/DJCPD/PD/2009/2009_09_10_
>Starturn_cnc_lathe/P1010045.JPG So yo
So as per previous thread, I may be moving this to another PC. And
probably change to an SSHD.
I spent a ridiculous amount of time getting the OS and LinuxCNC RT
installed and configured. And I didn't do all of it myself so it's not
a straight shot to repeat. I'm just saying if I start from
On Saturday 07 May 2016 08:18:48 Andy Pugh wrote:
> I am trying to figure out where to put the limit/home target on the Z
> axis of my lathe. The saddle can get all the way to the headstock if I
> am using the collet chuck, though it doesn't need to. If I put on a
> face-plate then the carriage wi
The denford starturn has the switch on the saddle and a sliding member
gripping the bed just visible under the chuck to the rear
http://www.collection.archivist.info/archive/DJCPD/PD/2009/2009_09_10_Starturn_cnc_lathe/P1010045.JPG
So you can put it where you need for a setup
Dave Caroline
---
You don't home away from the chuck?
I'm guessing multiple configs is out of the question for some reason
like it's more fun to be inventive...
JT
On 5/7/2016 7:18 AM, Andy Pugh wrote:
> I am trying to figure out where to put the limit/home target on the Z axis of
> my lathe.
> The saddle can
> On 7 May 2016, at 12:54, Nicklas Karlsson
> wrote:
>
> That's certainly valuable information. Once every 64 seconds or once every
> second is equally bad just harder to find.
The fact that it was exactly every 64 seconds was the clue that prompted
someone on the forum to identify it as SM
I am trying to figure out where to put the limit/home target on the Z axis of
my lathe.
The saddle can get all the way to the headstock if I am using the collet chuck,
though it doesn't need to.
If I put on a face-plate then the carriage will eventually hit that. The same
is true for each of t
> > I have an old server intel Xeon, it is used as a server and I did not try
> > real time kernel yet.
>
>
> I have been running an old Xeon server on my lathe for several years now.
> It's just about OK for latency, but does need the SMI tweak or it throws in
> a big one every 64 seconds.
> ...
On 7 May 2016 at 09:39, Nicklas Karlsson
wrote:
> I have an old server intel Xeon, it is used as a server and I did not try
> real time kernel yet.
I have been running an old Xeon server on my lathe for several years now.
It's just about OK for latency, but does need the SMI tweak or it throws
I have an old server intel Xeon, it is used as a server and I did not try real
time kernel yet. If you happen to come over old servers thrown out it may be
worth a try, even though I have no idea I suspect they are a little bit
different built.
On Sat, 7 May 2016 10:08:17 +0300
Andrew wrote:
A year back someone recommended these on the list
http://www.ebay.com/itm/281991064246
I purchased three and I like them so far.
Decent latency and more than enough processor power for a CNC PC.
Andrew
Andrew
2016-05-06 9:55 GMT+03:00 Danny Miller :
> I understand the computational requirements
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