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This may be a totally irrelevant point but have you made sure that the electrical components will work with a 60Hz supply rather than the 50Hz that the UK uses?
Peter - thanks for that suggestion, I'll have to have a closer look at the pcb. I've sent out a message to a guy that I might have supplied a cct diagram to, about 15 years ago ! No idea what happened to my copy - may be on an old hdd.
Routalot - Good point. Not quite sure how to check that, but as Dennis Bohlke designed it in USA, and the power supply has a dual voltage switch, I think I should be OK.
Regards,
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
Peter, While there appears to be no separate 'enable' switch, either on the outside of the case or on the pcb, I take your point about the software needing to be running.
As I'm still at the stage of trying to test the X axis in the stepconf wizard, and getting no response from the motor, I'm wondering if I can put +5v on to the 'enable' pin (labeled pin 14) on the parport input socket ? Thus fooling the controller into believing it has software running !
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
Hi John,
That may be possible although it could be requiring 0v to be applied if negative logic is used.
Or, it may require a charge pump signal (~10KHz).
Basically it is difficult to predict what signal is required to enable the controller.
Cheers
Peter.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
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0v ? Good point Peter. I'll power up the controller, and measure the voltage on that 'enable' pin. If it's 'high', then I'll try grounding it, if it's 'low', I'll try +5v.
How does that sound ?
'Charge pump signal' - I hope not !
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
By chance (?) I went to my own profile, and looking at the list of settings, saw at the bottom 'Attachments'.
Clicked on that, and went down to the date that I was having the original problems, and there it was - the cct diagram.
I've posted here again, in case anyone else needs it.
John
Just click on it to show.
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
I've just had a brain wave - checked the parport mode in the bios, and discovered the default setting for this pc is PS/2.
Now faced with decision - EPP or ECP ?
EPP gives 2 addresses - 378h or 278h ?
ECP gives 3 addresses - 378h, 278h and 3BCh.
In addition, ECP then offers a DMA channel setting - OFF, DMA1 or DMA3
Feel I've opened a can of worms, but may be on the right track !
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
All the parallel port driven machines I've ever set up wanted EPP.
I've now set the parport mode to EPP, and the address in the config to 0x378, and at least I no longer get the pop 'error' window.
However, I'm no further forward in getting any response from the motors. All seems to be as dead as the proverbial dodo.
What is keeping me going is knowing that the controller and motors have worked for me in the past. Quite apart from the 15 or so years that affected the memory, plus the little matter of the not so small mud-wasp nest(now cleaned out), there is the matter of my original set up used Supercam software in Windows 98.
As a plan B, I might have to consider reinstalling that cd as a piece of legacy software in a Windows XP desktop I have. It's not a route I favour, and would much prefer to run Linuxcnc in Ubuntu, but who knows. It might be the final resort.
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.
As I recall, Supercam was supposed to be an alternative to G-code, and wasn't compatible with it. Since it's no longer supported, trying to revive it sounds like a step backwards. But if you're not using it, what are you using for a CNC controller? LinuxCNC? Mach3? If not, you could try it and see if you get any response from your motors. The demo version of Mach3 will stop working after 500 lines of code, but it should be able to indicate whether your system works or not.
24v is pretty marginal if you want good performance from your steppers. Most will work better with 50v or more. If you get tired of fiddling with this thing, consider investing in a new control system, like the Geckodrive G-540, which has 4 drivers and an integral breakout board. It can handle up to 50v from the power supply, and will run off a parallel port.
Calling it a day.
Thanks everyone for your help.
Regards
John
It's like doing jigsaw puzzles in the dark.
Enjoy today's problems, for tomorrow's may be worse.