Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Numerical controlled 2 axis table


Numerical controlled 2 axis table
I could watch this all day!

#engineering

20 comments:

  1. Huh.  That's beautiful, but it also takes some fancy drive calculations: there are a limited number of x:y ratios for which that works, and the other ratios will end up lifting the table off one set of drive rollers.  (Which is a shame: it'd be lovely to have such a low-profile xy table.)

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  2. related cnc geekery: a cnc 3d printer tuned such that the motors' frequencies during movement end up playing music.
    http://www.3ders.org/articles/20150126-delta-reprap-3d-printer-plays-beethoven-fur-elise-using-only-motor-sounds.html

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  3. An awesome graphic representation of binary code

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  4. Last frames answered my doubt about this working in a dirty environment, though magnets on either side of the barrier plate have their own problems with friction and gritty contaminants...

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  5. durtieduck -- there are some neat cnc retrofits for etchasketches out there.  http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:6873

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  6. Huh, never thought of such an amazing piece of invention. Nice

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  7. John Bump I don't see any problem with x:y ratios.   The table slides on x while y turns, and slides on y while x turns.  No conflicts.
    ...  unless you see something I don't?

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  8. I may be missing something, Bill Trowbridge -- but when x and y turn at the same time I'm expecting to see it hopping on one of the two. It looks like an overconstrained system.  But I've been kicking the idea around in my head and I'm less sure of that than I was: the sliding motion may address what looks like overconstraints to me.

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  9. John Bump There are lots of examples of it moving diagonally at various angles in the video.

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  10. Bill Trowbridge -- I think you're right.  I'm going to have to print one to try it out, now.

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