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  • tommylight
  • tommylight's Avatar
Today 22:27

Machine choice for composite panel CNC + probe-driven XY/Z G-code compensation

Category: Milling Machines

1. yes, industrial ones are very expensive and very heavy, also fully equipped for any task. I would steer clear of china ones for under 20K as those are "projects", not tools.
2. Biesse, SMC, etc can be found for cheap and retrofitted, not easy and a lot of work, but definitely worth it as you end up with a machine built like a tank with controls that never fail.
3. There are some examples around here and a nice little piece of software for it, but i never used it so i'll leave that to others.
  • tommylight
  • tommylight's Avatar
Today 22:17
Replied by tommylight on topic Base threadwith Mesa?

Base threadwith Mesa?

Category: General LinuxCNC Questions

Check the hal file if there is anything using the base period, if not you can remove it.
  • Badger1875
  • Badger1875
Today 22:16 - Today 22:17

Crazy characters in code after import from another document (Word or eq.)

Category: G&M Codes

Hi,
I tried Editor, Notepad++ and eq. all the same result!

Still trying to figure out what the problem is...

If I open the file with gedit from Linux, everything looks fine, but as soonas I change to LinuxCNC I have the same crap...

Freddie
  • kb0thn
  • kb0thn
Today 22:12

Laser power scaling based on speed and direction

Category: HAL Examples

I have a 7I77 and a 7I76 hooked to a 5i25. And then there is a 7I66-8 and a 7I66-24 connected via serial (but I don't think those matter).

I looked for a while and didn't find / couldn't figure out with firmware I would need. Can you recommend an exact firmware?

Thanks!
  • PCW
  • PCW's Avatar
Today 22:05

Laser power scaling based on speed and direction

Category: HAL Examples

To get hardware PWM you need to have firmware on the FPGA that supports PWM.
For example if using a 7I76, there is FPGA firmware that replaces 1 Step/Dir output
with hardware PWM/Dir
 
  • PCW
  • PCW's Avatar
Today 21:56
Replied by PCW on topic Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes

Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes

Category: PnCConf Wizard

Posting your hal/ ini files would help to pin down the issue.
 
  • LucaGiorcelli
  • LucaGiorcelli
Today 21:31

Machine choice for composite panel CNC + probe-driven XY/Z G-code compensation

Category: Milling Machines

Hi all,

I'm planning a gantry router build for machining composite panels into cabinet components. Looking for advice on machine choice and stack.

Material

- Sandwich panels: 1mm aluminium skins on both faces, polyurethane foam core
- Total thickness: ~60mm nominal, but varies ±1mm across a batch
- Panel size: up to 1500x3000mm

Parts and operations



- Cutting outlines
- Pockets and step joints on panel face
- V-scoring the aluminium skin to create precise fold lines (score-and-fold)

These operations require multiple tools in a single job (end mills for pockets and joints, V-bit for scoring), so automatic tool change (ATC) is a hard requirement.

The step joints are the critical operation: they create mechanical overlap between mating panels so cabinets assemble with tight joints. A 1mm thickness variation in the stock translates directly into a gap.

Workflow

probing → generate Z map → process map (Python) → adjust G-code geometry (XY and Z) → send corrected G-code → machining

- Fusion 360 CAM produces nominal G-code
- Before cutting, I probe a grid of Z points across the panel surface
- A Python script reads the probe map and rewrites the G-code: step depths and joint profiles are adjusted to the actual measured local thickness — for both the panel being cut and its mating counterpart
- This is not just Z surface compensation: XY profiles are modified based on the probe map so that mating joints match regardless of thickness variation

Why LinuxCNC

- Workflow already tested with LinuxCNC + MESA cards (7i96/7i77) on an entry level router.
- Plan to use the Python socket interface for probe data collection and G-code rewriting — tight integration between probing and post-processing is central to the workflow

My questions

1. Are there manufacturers selling new gantry routers with these specs who ship with LinuxCNC, or sell mechanics separately from the controller?
   - Working envelope: ~1600x3200mm
   - HF spindle: 18k+ RPM
   - Integrated vacuum table with independently switchable zones
   - ATC (tool magazine or rack)
   - Probe input

2. For a retrofit path: which used industrial gantry platforms have the best LinuxCNC community experience?
   - Main concerns: ATC integration and vacuum zone management via MESA I/O

3. Any experience with probe-map-driven G-code modification beyond simple Z surface mapping?
   - Currently planning G38.x + Python
   - Is there a better pattern for this use case?

Thanks

 
  • rszemeti
  • rszemeti
Today 21:21
Base threadwith Mesa? was created by rszemeti

Base threadwith Mesa?

Category: General LinuxCNC Questions

Phew, its taken a few years, but my irrecoverable account has finally been deleted and I have been able to re-register under my usual username,hoorah! :)

While trying to troublshoot a CNC router that has been running just fine for years and suddenly can't find its 5i25 card ... it occurred to me ... does a Mesa based install even need a base thread?  Surely just a servo thread is all thats needed?

Can I comment out the BASE_THREAD in [EMCMOT], remove the thread start in HAL and move any HAL things that were on the base thread to the servo thread?

I w
  • djdelorie
  • djdelorie
Today 20:53
Replied by djdelorie on topic Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes

Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes

Category: PnCConf Wizard

In your INI file look for a KINEMATICS entry. Change XYZ to XYYZ to tell it you have two Y joints. Further down you end up with [AXIS_Y] but [JOINT_1] and [JOINT_2]. PNCCONF should have set this up for you.
The other important thing is that the two Y motors can't share a homing sensor input. You can share X and Y1 or Y2 and Z but not Y1 and Y2.
You may also need to reverse the rotation of one of the Y motors. How you do this depends on your hardware, of course.
  • scsmith1451
  • scsmith1451's Avatar
Today 20:25
Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes was created by scsmith1451

Configuring and Homing dual Y Axes

Category: PnCConf Wizard

1. Over the winter I modified my DYI Router Mill adding a tandem Y axis and rebuilding my Z axis support with a 2-DF gimbal  to true the spindle to the table. Today, I attempted to home the machine however, when the Y axes homed, one triggered before the other causing LCNC to complain about not being able to home one axis while the other is moving off the the home position.

What the the best way to resolve this issue such that both axes travel together, both for homing and moving off the home switch.

2. Using PNCCONF for configuring LCNC with tandem Y axes, when testing the Y axis only one of the steppers responds. Is there something that I missed in PNCCONF that will allow both Y steppers to be tested together?

3. What is the .ini PARAMETER that tells LCNC that two axes are in tandem?

Kind Regards,
  • andrax
  • andrax's Avatar
Today 20:10

400V Servo (51 Nm) mit EtherCAT / CiA402 in LinuxCNC – bezahlbarer Drive gesucht

Category: Deutsch

Stell doch mal ein Bild ein.
Stuttgart ist arschweit weg. 
Sitze in sachsen
  • depronman
  • depronman
Today 19:29

current latest download of LinuxCNC V2.9.8 will not install GRUB on several PC's

Category: Installing LinuxCNC

So whilst trying to install you effectively had no internet connection
Same result that myself and friend of mine experienced
  • depronman
  • depronman
Today 19:27

current latest download of LinuxCNC V2.9.8 will not install GRUB on several PC's

Category: Installing LinuxCNC

No problem at all I was just a little unsure who Tommy was replying too
I think the grub problem that you are seeing is down to lack of internet
Both myself and friend of mine who knows linux FAR better than I do experienced the same issue with the 2.9.8 iso when trying to install with no internet present
  • Finngineering
  • Finngineering
Today 19:03

current latest download of LinuxCNC V2.9.8 will not install GRUB on several PC's

Category: Installing LinuxCNC

I installed LinuxCNC 2.9.8 on a virtual machine a few weeks back. It also failed during the grub installation phase. I'm 99% that at least in my case, something with the automatic network configuration did not work properly, and this caused the grub installation to fail. If I recall correctly, the DNS server was incorrectly set, and I had to manually edit /etc/resolv.conf to put the correct DNS server first.
  • Xnke
  • Xnke
Today 18:46 - Today 18:48

current latest download of LinuxCNC V2.9.8 will not install GRUB on several PC's

Category: Installing LinuxCNC

Boots and works perfectly in live mode. The same system loads and runs Windows XP with zero faults, and will boot and run an old Mandrake linux installer USB with no errors. (OLD! Like kernel 2.2!) Of course, the NIC doesn't work with Mandrake, but everything installs. It won't boot after because of the lack of UEFI support, but it does install.

Depronman, the reason I jumped in on this thread with you is that I think I might also be having a network installation error. I am wondering if it's relying on having internet access to download any missing packages that it needs, and that it's missing a few critical packages if it can't get internet access.
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