Atom 330 or D525 or D510?
I know the lower the jitter number the better. What about for interval, is it also better the lower the number?
Now to the hardware part, I found a used Intel Atom 330 board with 1gb ram for really cheap and I have a feeling that it performs alike with the D510 and the onboard video.
Although the onboard video is slightly different for both, they seem to perform the same.
So in this case, I would get the Atom 330, but correct me if I am wrong.
And the D525 seems to be just like the D510, but performs a little worse with EMC2.
On a side note, if I do get the Atom 330, what PSU and case should I get? How many watts would be stable enough to run EMC2?
Is it good to dual boot windows and EMC2?
Are SSD hard drives to any advantage when it comes to EMC2?
And for keyboard and mouse, should I get PS/2 or USB?
Thanks.
How cheap? Cheap enough to not care if it doesn't work?Now to the hardware part, I found a used Intel Atom 330 board with 1gb ram for really cheap and I have a feeling that it performs alike with the D510 and the onboard video.
Although the onboard video is slightly different for both, they seem to perform the same.
So in this case, I would get the Atom 330, but correct me if I am wrong.
60W is plenty with an SSD.On a side note, if I do get the Atom 330, what PSU and case should I get? How many watts would be stable enough to run EMC2?
Is it good to dual boot windows and EMC2?
Less power, no moving parts to get damaged by dust or vibration. 8GB is plenty for a LinuxCNC installation, but might be a bit tight if you want to dual-boot Windows.Are SSD hard drives to any advantage when it comes to EMC2?
USB.And for keyboard and mouse, should I get PS/2 or USB?
Thanks.
I asked the PS/2 vs USB question because maybe PS/2 would perform better latency-wise than USB because I heard problems with USB, but I guess not.
Also what is max interval in the latency test?
Is a bigger value better or is a smaller value better for max interval?
I know for max jitter a smaller value is better.
Now I am stuck, I want a hardware setup for under $175 with Ram, HDD or SSD, case and PSU included.
8GB of and SSD? Is that enough to run projects for cutting?
For your reference I will be using a HobbyCNC Pro 3/4 axis driver board.
Thanks.
New price of a D525 is about $70, but that is without memory, drive and PSU.Well it was on ebay, and I got outbid. Auction won for $50 plus shipping. Not too cheap
I think it is just thread-period + latency. So it only really depends on what thread period you have set.Also what is max interval in the latency test?
Is a bigger value better or is a smaller value better for max interval?
Now I am stuck, I want a hardware setup for under $175 with Ram, HDD or SSD, case and PSU included.
8GB of and SSD? Is that enough to run projects for cutting?
8GB is plenty. I _develop_ LinuxCNC on an 8GB SSD. The base installation is user 4GB.
Do you need a case? My board sits in the same box as the stepper drives. Treat it as a component, not a PC.
If you already have a 12V supply (or can derive one from the stepper PSU) then look at
www.mini-box.com/Intel-DN2800MT-Mini-ITX-Motherboard
That has a 9-19V power jack, so saves the cost of a PSU.
Cheap 8GB SSD, as used by me for the last year or more with no problems
www.ebay.co.uk/itm/150593568661
(that's ebay.co.uk but as it ships direct from Hong Kong, that shouldn't matter)
Then 2GB ram is $10.
Onboard PSU? Nice, but you sure that would give the entire system enough power if I add drives?
That SSD you linked is a Chinese made SSD. Those are really reliable?
I mean I can get a 32gb SSD for $50 on newegg.
Can you post a picture of your case please?
Thanks.
One would have to assume so. It came with a power cable to plug into SATA drives.Onboard PSU? Nice, but you sure that would give the entire system enough power if I add drives?
My sample of one has been. But at that price the Newegg one is compelling. Though you don't _need_ 32GB. The DOM form-factor (just plug it in to the SATA slot) is convenient too.That SSD you linked is a Chinese made SSD. Those are really reliable?
I mean I can get a 32gb SSD for $50 on newegg.
picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/OT4lV-DVGZ...pFm0?feat=directlinkCan you post a picture of your case please?
The PSUs and D510MO are actually mounted on the back of a touchscreen monitor.
Yes, made from 20x20 extrusion.That is one giant case you got there.
Front view: picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/N7Z88ai8cR...pFm0?feat=directlink
Looks like it's all built into the case.
How much did you spend to build that case?
Yes, it's a 17" touchscreen.Nice is that a monitor?
How much did you spend to build that case?
I think the screen was £120, the motherboard £80, £25 for the PicoPSU, £30 for the 12V PSU, £15 for the 5V/24V PSU, £25 for the 20x20 section, buttons £2 each from eBay, £120 for the Mesa 5i23, £10 for the riser.
Relays etc I have lost track, £20 for the contactor, £10 for the SSR that went in yesterday, £25 for the Arduino, £20 for the custom-made resolver interface PCBs, £20 for the terminal blocks, $250 for the 7i64, $120 for the 7i39...
There is probably £1000+ of parts there, but I spent it slowly, and a lot of it is parts I had from other projects.
I am building a rather serious machine, (I have 1.5kw of servo drives, plus the spindle) you wouldn't need to spend anything like that much.