by Travis » Mon Jul 24, 2023 5:55 am
Well I've waited a while for a proper response. So far it seems no one wants to discuss this further. What is sad about this, is I've been reading through many areas of the forum, and this seems to be a trending deal. One guy basically pleading with you about cv settings because it's providing poor surface finish results. As well as trying to get help going back to mach3. Well I am having literally the same exact problems, identical to what he described, using uc300eth, ucbb1, clean installs. Can't get homing to work on the y axis with the a axis slaved. Works fine in uccnc actually everything on the plasma works perfect, all thenrelays, touch sensors, homing, except this cv tolerance. I've tried 1000's of combinations at this point. Put in what should be an unnecessary amount of time in file editing to try to node edit to "trick" uccnc into moving through corners faster.
I want to say even with all this happening, I still just purchased a new uc300eth, and ucbb1 set from cnc drive. The reason, is because that setup is for a router, and in terms of that it has always been 1000% reliable.
The reason I said the above is to specify I've made the decision to go with uccnc 3 times now, and I've spent 6 months creating my own custom screenset from scratch a few years ago, and I enjoy the interface so much I don't want to be forced to change.
I'm not some random guy being a bigot here, I'm a guy who runs a small business, much smaller than uccnc, trying to survive. The problem is in my eyes, is you need to start coming up with better excuses than just saying something bad about mach3, or referring everyone to the manual. We have all read through the constant velocity setting a million times by now, and reading through it isn't going to make it any better. It just flat out needs to be fixed, and I'm sure that sounds like a huge undertaking. I'm sure it is because I don't code, although I recently just signed up for c++ courses and I'm about 3 months in. For guys like the team at uccnc, if you wrote the program from.scratch, you ought to be plenty smart enough to think through a way to fix it and or adjust it for plasma use. Even mach3 has a small coding deviation for increasing acceleration during plasma use specifically. I've seen it done with cheap hardware and cheap motors, on a lack luster machine platform. Uccnc ought to be running circles around mach3 in this aspect.
Please create a thread and updates regarding the cv setting within the trajectory planner. So you can become the best control software period. And for the sake of all your loyal customers who continue to buy even knowing this large pitfall.