Andy Holcomb wrote:
Okay, I have tried all of the values I get from the lspci command and
non of them work; but, the factory port at 378 does work.
the values I got were
dc00
d800
d400
d000
cc00
c800
From what I remember on emc1 I had to use d000
Andy
Chris Radek wrote:
Kyle wrote:
Andy Holcomb wrote:
Okay, I have tried all of the values I get from the lspci command and
non of them work; but, the factory port at 378 does work.
the values I got were
dc00
d800
d400
d000
cc00
c800
From what I remember on emc1 I had to use d000
Andy
Chris Radek wrote:
Kyle wrote:
Andy Holcomb wrote:
Okay, I have tried all of the values I get from the lspci command and
non of them work; but, the factory port at 378 does work.
the values I got were
dc00
d800
d400
d000
cc00
c800
From what I remember on emc1 I had to use d000
Andy
Chris
I just found one of my old emc.ini files and I have
; Address for parallel port used for steppers
; IO_BASE_ADDRESS =0x378
IO_BASE_ADDRESS =0xa800
I am not at the location of the machine, but I am wondering if I am
blind and took an a for a c
I'll let you know tomorrow.
Andy
Andy
I lost my hard drive yesterday, it had BDI EMC running on it. I
downloaded EMC2 Live and have it running on the computer. I have a LPT
card installed that I use because my factory port is noisy. I am
running stepper motors on a bridgeport, I have chosen the standard
stepper set up in inch mode
Thanks
Andy
Chris Radek wrote:
On Wed, Mar 28, 2007 at 12:59:17PM -0500, Andy Holcomb wrote:
Remind me again how to find the address of the lpt ports.
Where do I make this change of address?
http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/emcinfo.pl?NetMos
Okay, I have tried all of the values I get from the lspci command and
non of them work; but, the factory port at 378 does work.
the values I got were
dc00
d800
d400
d000
cc00
c800
From what I remember on emc1 I had to use d000
Andy
Chris Radek wrote:
On Wed, Mar 28, 2007 at 12:59:17PM