Jon,

Also notice that when you "touch off" it asks you what coordinate system 
you want to set via the touch off.

For some reason I tend to use G55 on my lathe.  Then after I am all 
setup.  I have a G55 near the top of my program to get into that 
coordinate system and run the program.

As you can see there are a number of ways to do this...

Dave

On 3/25/2010 7:07 AM, Andy Pugh wrote:
> On 25 March 2010 11:19, John Guenther<[email protected]>  wrote:
>    
>>   At any rate, I out of habit use machine coordinates all
>> the time.
>>      
> I think that is the problem. The machine coordinates are fixed to the
> axes and can only easily be relocated by a homing process.
> The machine will refuse to move outside these limits.
> I think you said that you have no home switches? In that case I can't
> remember what happens when you home the axis, I think that the current
> physical position becomes the point at which the machine absolute
> numerical position takes the value from the ini-file axis home
> position.
>
>    
>>   Perhaps a better example of what I would like to be able to
>> do is this.  I use a manual tool height setter.  I put it a new tool,
>> then jog Z down until the tool height setter shows 0 on its dial.  Now I
>> need to be able to tell EMC that the Z axis is at 2 inches above the
>> work.  How can I do this in EMC?  I have tried the work offsets as
>> suggested and that is not working for me.  In Mach3 I just click on the
>> Z axis DRO and enter 2.00 and I am ready to go.
>>      
> This is exactly what the working coordinate systems are for. If you
> change the view to "Relative" either from the menu or by pressing "#"
> then you will see the current working coordinate values.
>
> Note that you are _always_ on one of the working coordinate systems.
> You have to use special G-codes to move in the absolute machine
> coordinate space. The distinction might not be clear in cases where
> the working coordinate system has no offset from the machine
> coordinate system, and this will often be the case for a machine with
> no home switches.
>
> However, any G0, G1, G2, G3 etc move will always move in the current
> (probably G54) coordinates.
>
> So, for a machine with no home switches the start-up process would be:
> Select Absolute coordinate view
> Move to the extreme limits of travel of each axis. Home the axes from
> the GUI with the "home" button. I think you will see the machine
> coordinates take on the home position values from the INI file, but I
> could well be wrong. To save time and trouble you could set the home
> position to be mid-travel and set the axes limits symmetrical about
> this point.
> Change the view to Relative Coordinates
> Jog to where you want X=0 and Y=0 to be, set them to zero (or some
> other value) with the touch-off button.
> Bring your tool down to the height setter, select Z, press the
> touch-off button and type in your 2" tool height value.
>
> You should now be good to go.
>
> Clicking the DRO in Mach sounds to be doing exactly the same thing as
> EMC touch-off.
>
> There is also the option of touching-off into the Tool table, which
> can be useful for machines with multiple tool holders, less so for
> single collet machines.
>
> There is a lot more info on the Wiki,
> http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/emcinfo.pl?CoordinateSystems
>
> Bear in mind that my understanding of this issue is incomplete, and I
> don't have a machine here at work to experiment with. I still
> sometimes find myself in a bit of a tangle with offsets and
> "programmed move would exceed machine minimum...." when there is
> clearly lots of space left.
>
>    


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