Today it happened again. I couldn't get a video, only a photo as it all happened too quickly.
- UCR201 screen when X decided to go X- until hitting soft limit
I was jogging X+ by 1.0 being
very careful of the number of clicks felt. I needed to move X+ by 1 unit to get closer to my part. It moved X+ by 1, but then immediately went X- until hitting the soft limit which was hiding just to the side by about 3 units. I quickly pressed the STOP button on the UCR201 but my reaction time is not what it once was and according to the UCCNC software I hit the softlimit first. The log shows me "Softlimit reached;"
Thank you, thank you, thank you whoever first implemented soft limits!I'll add that during this move there was no other
large machinery operating in the building (I've always been suspicious of a VFD or some giant AC motor introducing interference). I can say today at least that that wasn't the case.
I was a mere 3 or 4 feet from the USB receiver, line of sight, when this happened today.
Yesterday I had Z act similar but at the time I brushed it off as possibly being my mistake, so I didn't want to bug you. I was moving Z- by 1.0 for 2 detents when it completed the requested move then decided to move toward Z- until I hit the estop. I didn't mention this at the time because I was concerned perhaps my sleeve moved the wheel (which I'm normally very careful of) but nevertheless it would have only taken 5 detents to cause it to my Z max at the time.
Would it be possible to rig up a diagnostic tool for the pendant that logs all I/O from the UCR201? Perhaps I can leave it idle, machine offline, and see if it's actually getting some phantom signal from somewhere. I haven't experienced any of this movement with UCCNC alone so I'm fairly confident it's happening due to the pendant somehow.
edit: it happened yet again just now. Was moving X+ in 1.0 increments by approximately 20 clicks. Once it reached the commanded spot, it stopped and moved X- until I hit stop. There's no possible way I or anything told it to move 20 units in X-. However, I did set the pendant down at what seems like the same time as I was foolishly confident it was going to obey my simple movement request. If perhaps there's something inside that's insanely sensitive to slight bumps (and I do very much mean slight, it wouldn't have cracked a damaged egg on concrete) that might explain this. A wonky coil or something perhaps in the pendant?