The machine was assembled without ballscrews, servo drives connected to breakout boards and motors, and proved to rotate. Then the ballscrews were connected to the platform joints, and the nuts bolted to the actuators. Till the last moment there were doubts, that the platform would be rigid enough. But it proved rigid as planned! The very first moves were luckily captured on the video. Not much spectacular, but really exciting for me.
Monday, April 9, 2012
LinuxCNC hexapod machine tool
As I promised, here's a bit more. Since EMC2 name has changed recently, now the machine becomes LinuxCNC hexapod.
The machine was assembled without ballscrews, servo drives connected to breakout boards and motors, and proved to rotate. Then the ballscrews were connected to the platform joints, and the nuts bolted to the actuators. Till the last moment there were doubts, that the platform would be rigid enough. But it proved rigid as planned! The very first moves were luckily captured on the video. Not much spectacular, but really exciting for me.
The machine was assembled without ballscrews, servo drives connected to breakout boards and motors, and proved to rotate. Then the ballscrews were connected to the platform joints, and the nuts bolted to the actuators. Till the last moment there were doubts, that the platform would be rigid enough. But it proved rigid as planned! The very first moves were luckily captured on the video. Not much spectacular, but really exciting for me.
Labels:
DIY,
EMC2,
hexapod,
homemade,
LinuxCNC,
machine tool,
parallel manipulator,
Stewart platform
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