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|    rec.crafts.metalworking    |    Metal working and metallurgy    |    215,319 messages    |
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|    Message 213,851 of 215,319    |
|    Bob La Londe to Bob La Londe    |
|    Re: Yet Another New Machine    |
|    04 Nov 24 16:24:41    |
      From: none@none.com99              On 10/31/2024 10:48 AM, Bob La Londe wrote:       > On 10/31/2024 4:39 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:       >> "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:vfuc8v$2ap2c$1@dont-email.me...       >>       >> ...       >> The thing that excites me most about it (Onefinity Elite Foreman) is the       >> Masso G3 Touch controller it comes with. ...       >> Bob La Londe       >> ------------------------------       >> I began designing machine control panels with paper drawings to be       >> made on a shear, brake and Strippit punch. CAD/CAM and plasma cutting       >> is quite an advance but I must say the old way was easy to learn and       >> worked pretty well. I was earning a living with just a pencil.       >>       >> Learning the old manual methods has been useful when I needed to       >> modify existing equipment that was too awkward or flexible to do on a       >> machine.       >>       >> I also designed relay ladder logic for actual relays, before PLCs       >> arrived. I began circuit board design with black tape or a laundry       >> marker and advanced through computerized design and simulation as they       >> developed. The electronics I learned in the Army used individual       >> transistors, then I closely followed the growth progress of ICs       >> through FPGAs that could self-configure to match a CAD schematic. The       >> computer revolution has been interesting to observe and participate in.       >>       >       >       > First off I have "built up" a couple CNC control systems. Designed       > might be a strong word, but assembled from assorted "black boxes" would       > not. The thing is the Masso G3 control does "almost" everything in one       > finished unit for not much more than I could buy the parts, and it       > appears to be code compatible with what I am already using so the post       > processor would need little or no modification. Yes I have modified the       > post processors for all of my different machines. Most are just minor       > tweaks. Actually I rewrote the macros more than modified the post on       > the Mach controlled machines, so except for physical capability the code       > is cross compatible on all of those.       >       > Well if I was cheap I could build a controller a lot cheaper, but I'm       > tired of tweaking machines for weeks to get them to run right.       >       >              I was warned to expect 3-4 weeks to ship as they build machines to       order. I got notice this morning my machine is shipping today. I guess       I'll be desperately be trying to build a base and table for it in the       next couple days before it arrives.                            --       Bob La Londe       CNC Molds N Stuff              --       This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software.       www.avg.com              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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