Open-source Industrial Robot Controller Part 2: Starting Over...

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • R08 updates and starting to work on a new controller to get get some serious performance out of it.
    Current deadline for a minimal viable servo drive and controller is the end of december, we'll see if we can actually meet it.
    If you have any suggestions for stuff like the types of motors, encoders, kinematics, or programming methods feel free to leave them below. I plan on putting a lot of time into making this controller very user friendly and easy to configue since linuxCNC is a nightmare to setup anything non-standard on.
    Discord: / discord
    Patreon: / excessiveoverkill
    Paypal: www.paypal.com/donate/?busine...
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Комментарии • 300

  • @sdminer49
    @sdminer49 9 месяцев назад +413

    My 4yo son watched this with me and now he can’t stop talking about how much smarter you are than me. Thanks a lot, jerk. In all seriousness - nice work. Can’t wait to see the final product.

    • @takeguess
      @takeguess 4 месяца назад +4

      😂🤣LMFAO

  • @EVehicleJ
    @EVehicleJ 9 месяцев назад +289

    "AC power is basically just really long distance regenerative braking."

    • @amemestoanend1958
      @amemestoanend1958 9 месяцев назад +19

      Haha I love the variety of ways people describe AC for you're quote to "wall gas".

    • @-r-495
      @-r-495 8 месяцев назад +2

      Amen, brother.

    • @xani666
      @xani666 8 месяцев назад +1

      That's kinda how big generators in power network keep in sync

  • @dkraft
    @dkraft 9 месяцев назад +151

    I've got two Motoman K30's (1995 era) running in production and its a nightmare trying to find Servo Drivers. Looking forward to moving this forward. The world definitely needs opensource 220V / 480V 20VA controllers!

    • @zyxwvutsrqponmlkh
      @zyxwvutsrqponmlkh 8 месяцев назад +5

      Loads of older CNC machines still have good steel and use these same servos and are impossible to keep running for similar issues. The biggest problem is decent servo drivers that don't cost 8 grand.

    • @carsonchan5102
      @carsonchan5102 8 месяцев назад

      @@zyxwvutsrqponmlkh
      every problem is an opportunity

    • @IAintScaredOfNoGhost
      @IAintScaredOfNoGhost 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@zyxwvutsrqponmlkh the wild part is that most of this technology is gatekept at a national legal level. Japan and the U.S. and Germany even went so far as to stamp "illegal for export" on all Okuma 2spV60 lathes from the 2000s, due to them having these expandable motion controller boards inside of them.

    • @Mtaalas
      @Mtaalas 5 месяцев назад

      @@IAintScaredOfNoGhostwhile Russia, China and other nuclear weapon countries are flexing their military muscles... I'm pretty OK with export restrictions on technology. It's not just about protecting ones financial interests.

    • @JashJacob
      @JashJacob 4 месяца назад +1

      This is why we scrap these old drives and motors. Add new servos and drives.

  • @joels7605
    @joels7605 9 месяцев назад +87

    I have a Fanuc CNC mill from the year 2000. It regenerates when the axis decelerate. Makes the LED lights and GFCI outlets in my house whistle.
    Also I will totally buy that new driver you're building. Keep being awesome!

    • @togowack
      @togowack 9 месяцев назад +2

      I have one for 6 axis in c++ that runs through arduino 100% custom programmed and better than the machine specific junk that comes with these robots

    • @bobedd1040
      @bobedd1040 9 месяцев назад

      post the code@@togowack

    • @TheCrazyPozavnist
      @TheCrazyPozavnist 9 месяцев назад

      @joels7605 what do you mean the outlets whistle?

    • @joels7605
      @joels7605 9 месяцев назад +10

      @@TheCrazyPozavnist They literally make noise. You can audibly hear what the CNC mill is doing to my electricity. My CNC machines are in my shop which is about 40m away from my house, and the GFCI outlets in a completely different building make noise.

    • @user-nz8rv8ft5q
      @user-nz8rv8ft5q 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@joels7605GFCIs are transformers, so it means that your machine is reducing the electricity quality by addition of high frequency harmonics.
      So, PFC or cheaper solution is just a bunch of ferrite beads or reactors(inductors) to improve the power quality.

  • @svuvich
    @svuvich 9 месяцев назад +92

    Dude this stuff is my childhood dream. I hope you get it done and I'll sure try to help your channel with whatever I can

  • @hydipieterse9318
    @hydipieterse9318 9 месяцев назад +40

    Easiest way around fanuc encoders to find reliable and affordable drives I have found recently is to ditch the factory encoders and replace them with 16bit encoders from DMM Tech in Canada. I have a couple of fanuc redcap motors been laying in storage for years due to the high price tag to try and revive them. I took a chance and ordered some encoders from them together with their DYN 4 ac servo drives (200vac), and within a few hours I had the motors running like new ones. Hardest job was to make custom fitting plates to fit the encoders. They supply you with software to do the encoder alignment, no fiddling with scopes etc. Just wire it up, fill in a few parameters and if the motor phase connections are done correctly, you will have the motors spinning in minutes. I have no affiliation with them, just found it was the cheapest reliable option after digging for many years. Their online support are also top notch.

    • @QuebecoisSti
      @QuebecoisSti 8 месяцев назад +7

      You should make videos or blog about it. Alot of people would love to see the process !!

  • @LeuxSeveN
    @LeuxSeveN 8 месяцев назад +4

    Hi german automation software developer for industrial robots here; I madly aprove.
    we need Open source Robot Controllers.

    • @AdaptivePhenix
      @AdaptivePhenix 8 месяцев назад

      Annin Robotics is a start. I would eliminate the steppers (even if they are closed-loop) in favor of servos.

  • @MrAlexhasker
    @MrAlexhasker 9 месяцев назад +19

    Your motivation , persistence and desire to learn is awesome. I’d love to to quit my job and just do cool projects like this

    • @von...
      @von... 8 месяцев назад +2

      just embezzle a few million, move to Belize, & you can do it! we believe in you :)

      (for legal reasons, I am clarifying that this is a joke lol)

  • @pimvandervliet
    @pimvandervliet 9 месяцев назад +29

    Very cool project, as someone that programs CNC motion controllers I’d say you have a lot of work on your hands doing this alone. But I’d love to see you succeed

    • @LikeFactoryMade
      @LikeFactoryMade 8 месяцев назад +1

      What kind of motion controllers are you programming? I am a software developer myself, but ever since I started building my own cnc controller app, all I dream is coding for something related.

    • @pimvandervliet
      @pimvandervliet 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@LikeFactoryMadeI work for Eding CNC, we develop a range of PC-based CNC controllers for milling machines, laser machines, lathes etc. I’m an embedded software engineer there, so I mostly do firmwares and bootloaders. What are you currently developing?

  • @alexcrouse
    @alexcrouse 9 месяцев назад +11

    My buddy has a 7 axis robot we are trying to get running, so we will be following this closely! It's all DC servo with resolvers, and software will definitely be our shortfall.

  • @markmaker2488
    @markmaker2488 9 месяцев назад +3

    Great explanation of what your issues are and how you plan on solving them. Can’t wait for the next episode. Well done 👍

  • @KravchenkoAudioPerth
    @KravchenkoAudioPerth 8 месяцев назад +4

    It's rare that I listen to someone that grasps this so well. I will be watching and learning. Thanks for taking the time to make this video and share it!
    Mark

  • @verynearlynatalie
    @verynearlynatalie 9 месяцев назад +9

    So happy to see an update. I've been working to build a controller for some old robots and am excited to see where this project will lead!

  • @Totalis1989
    @Totalis1989 9 месяцев назад +7

    Just an FYI, although I haven't demonstrated it with a FANUC protocol, I have managed to make the Raspberry Pi Pico poll encoders using the BiSS or Mitsubishi protocols. I can handle 8 BiSS encoders using the PIO hardware of the board. Probably not the best solution when compared to FPGAs but they are very cheap. Love what you're doing btw, keep it up.
    Greg

    • @Totalis1989
      @Totalis1989 9 месяцев назад +3

      If you can give me the details of the encoders on the Fanuc Motors, I will see if I can get my hands on one and test it on my Pi Pico setup

    • @ExcessiveOverkill
      @ExcessiveOverkill  9 месяцев назад +4

      docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nRmV0D8c2zIuhrnp7eMNqSO8C0mfWp4tSzxPsphXA7A/edit there’s a sheet that has the protocol sort of explained. A860-2014-T301 is the specific encoder part number, but it seems most aA64i encoders are similar.

    • @TheStinkyToast
      @TheStinkyToast 9 месяцев назад +1

      The RP2040 PIO‘s were also the first thing that came to my mind instead of the fpga‘s. From my point of view it seems easier to get going and is a lot cheaper as well.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@TheStinkyToastRpi are very bandwidth limited on the GPIO. Do you use external chips to monitor the encoders?

  • @robertboateng-duah9555
    @robertboateng-duah9555 9 месяцев назад +2

    Lovely work! I really enjoy the progress you're making. Big ups!

  • @jamescullins2104
    @jamescullins2104 9 месяцев назад +14

    Great job, keep up the good work! I think an open source controller would be an excellent gateway into modern small-scale integration. It could lead to great cobots, research, or even hobby use for other platforms such as metal 3D printers and multi axis EDMs. Super cool!!!

  • @mrbobsevil
    @mrbobsevil 9 месяцев назад +7

    Hey man I work in the automation industry and do some of this stuff as a hobby as well. I am so impressed by this project. Can't wait to see more

  • @SomeTechGuy666
    @SomeTechGuy666 8 месяцев назад

    I love what you are doing. Subscribed. Keep up the good work.
    Your explanation of motor controllers and motion controllers was very good. Not many people understand this.

  • @velvetypotato711
    @velvetypotato711 8 месяцев назад +3

    I think the community missed the opportunity to hire you full time as this project is easily worth a salary.

  • @user-hx4cf7mv1u
    @user-hx4cf7mv1u 4 месяца назад

    It was a struggle and a pleasure to keep up with what you were talking about! Awesome work! Subscribed, looking forward to what’s next

  • @Neo7CNC
    @Neo7CNC 8 месяцев назад +3

    I've always wanted to utilize an industrial robot but the ties to the manufacturers software and controllers has always been a deal breaker. Being able to utilize a robot without the stock controller is huge. I subbed to follow your journey. A finished product that could be used as you envision would be fantastic. Thanks for all your work.

  • @i_might_be_lying
    @i_might_be_lying 9 месяцев назад +2

    That's definitely an involved project. Love the idea of using the driver board for PFC

  • @Wrenchmonkey1
    @Wrenchmonkey1 8 месяцев назад

    This is an incredible undertaking! Subbed to see where this goes!

  • @whitneydesignlabs8738
    @whitneydesignlabs8738 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome work! Most is over my head, but I love trying to understand.

  • @nickvanderpool7434
    @nickvanderpool7434 8 месяцев назад

    This has been a very fun watch. I went through almost the exact same thing with a Unimate PUMA 560 robot I wanted to resurrect. Similar hardware encoder issues, similar starting again from scratch mid-way through situation... stay strong.

  • @mcstarcoin
    @mcstarcoin 9 месяцев назад +24

    I absolutely love your work and the Apache controller case Idea has been super helpful with my cnc project so I wanted to say thanks! And just out of curiosity, where did you learn how to do such cool deep-dives into the electronics? Thanks for the new post and keep up the good work! :D

    • @ExcessiveOverkill
      @ExcessiveOverkill  9 месяцев назад +20

      Mostly from watching a ridiculous amount of engineering RUclips videos. I kinda just learn as I go.

    • @serpent213
      @serpent213 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@ExcessiveOverkillYes, like with TV: YT makes smart people smarter and dumb people dumber. 😉

    • @agler_
      @agler_ 8 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@ExcessiveOverkill you must have some sort of formal electronics training? I am awestruck with how much you know yet you seem so young. I can't imagine how long it would take me to reach a level of knowledge to not just understand how all that stuff works, but to improve on it.

  • @dinok4774
    @dinok4774 9 месяцев назад +5

    You are legendary!
    It's my dream to have an arm of my own one day!
    Keep on making amazing content, you are an inspiration!

  • @h4z4rd42
    @h4z4rd42 8 месяцев назад +1

    Man... so much knowledge I'll never be able to get even close to.
    Even though there's a large Kuka sitting in the corner of my workshop collecting dust.
    Ex colleague bought it several years ago with such an outdated controller it doesn't even have USB. Anyway, never been able to make it work.
    Any chance to make it useful would be just incredible.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @sahirudilan
    @sahirudilan 8 месяцев назад

    Man this is awesome. Good luck and keep up. I wish you the best of luck!!

  • @winmancaboose
    @winmancaboose 9 месяцев назад +3

    I wanna see the faces of the people manufacture those robot arms when a single guy releases an open source controller for their million dollar robots.

  • @takeguess
    @takeguess 4 месяца назад

    You are a God sir if you successfully implement all of this into open-source. You are one of the most humble tubers around def rang the bell.

  • @HouseGurke
    @HouseGurke 9 месяцев назад +1

    This sounds like an incredibly interesting project. Can’t wait for more updates.

  • @max_eley
    @max_eley 9 месяцев назад +4

    Great to see another vid and this is absolutely awesome!, There is currently nothing out there quite like you have described, I will be following this project quite closely and wont have a problem supporting it via patreon or something.
    I was thinking about buying an old DMG 5 axis milling machine, that has control failures beyond reasonable repair and kind of experimenting with it, I think you project would be a great match and generally good testing for it.
    Thanks for sharing!

  • @mrraimundo130
    @mrraimundo130 9 месяцев назад +2

    I will support you so you can dedicate more time to these badass projects.

  • @koetschkid8733
    @koetschkid8733 9 месяцев назад +1

    Super interesting project and looking forward to see how things progress. If you are looking for ways to simulate your robot and test out/tune your motion control there are a number of open-source versions of common tools used in industry, such as OpenModelica, Scilab, & others. They have somewhat of a learning curve but it's amazing how much control prototyping you can do with just a simulated model of your system and then fine tune with the real system once you have something working.

  • @b.buster
    @b.buster 8 месяцев назад

    Super cool! The engineering department at my college has one of these and I never knew about all the intricacies involved with having it communicate with a computer.

  • @Record3677
    @Record3677 8 месяцев назад +2

    This is some of the coolest stuff I’ve ever seen

  • @nickbaddorf2673
    @nickbaddorf2673 8 месяцев назад +2

    I have used ROS (Robot Operating System) with the MoveIt program to control a custom robot arm. I never ended up finishing the project, but it wasnt to hard to get Moveit to work with my arm, and using ROS would make it potentially easier to setup the encoders and all the other control stuff.

  • @stefanguiton
    @stefanguiton 9 месяцев назад

    Excellent work! looking forward to seeing how it goes

  • @johnneyland3334
    @johnneyland3334 8 месяцев назад +1

    Really impressive ! Your knowledge and drive (lack of a better pun right lol ! ) Is exciting !!! I run new Fanuc robots here and am doing some exciting new projects with them. Let us know when you get more of your design objectives running like the FPGA and controller board. Thanks so much. John

  • @ventusprime
    @ventusprime 9 месяцев назад +1

    A intresting thought , feed the signalns and movment to a neural network , and task to translate the signals of the decoders.

  • @ericksuzart299
    @ericksuzart299 8 месяцев назад

    WOW, such a massive project for one guy alone, huh! I'm anxious for the next chapters! Keep this wonderful content, please.

  • @wi_zeus6798
    @wi_zeus6798 9 месяцев назад +2

    You rock! Awesome series, thanks for uploading

  • @SEALIFERESCUE
    @SEALIFERESCUE 9 месяцев назад

    Brilliant - keep going with this - love to see it move forward

  • @agent2153
    @agent2153 9 месяцев назад +1

    Really cool stuff, looking forward to the next episode!

  • @inventorj
    @inventorj 9 месяцев назад

    Been binging your channel and this upload got me all hyped to see it pop up lol thanks for making me want a robot arm now 😂

  • @splackism
    @splackism 9 месяцев назад +1

    I just discovered your channel thanks to yt magic. I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes and hope that you'll do so well that you can make this a full time gig!

  • @jesseevers
    @jesseevers 8 месяцев назад

    God this is outrageously cool...I'm more of a mechanical guy (cars/motorcycles/etc, just got a manual Bridgeport), but I'm also a software engineer and I've always been fascinated by the idea of using computers to run physical machines. Seeing this really gets my gears turning ;)
    Also, I've rarely seen someone with your level of knowledge talk about something this complex so clearly! Good on ya :)

  • @benharris4436
    @benharris4436 9 месяцев назад +3

    Suggest you aim to include dual STO inputs on the motor controller. And set up the safety+motion controller to eventually support Safe stop 1 (SS1) - which is basically just a configurable delay before triggering STO. Have the motor controllers in charge of the brakes, and link that in to STO chain.

  • @MatheusmsMendes
    @MatheusmsMendes 9 месяцев назад +5

    Out of nowhere: Lets rely on learning VHDL or Verilog and programming an FPGA just for fun and by the challenge to conclude a project !
    There will be many nights over my friend, good luck

    • @ExcessiveOverkill
      @ExcessiveOverkill  9 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, it’s not fun if it’s not challenging

    • @fraserbc
      @fraserbc 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@ExcessiveOverkill Don't fall into the trap many FPGA beginners do and test in real hardware without simulating. It makes debugging very painful, not least because of the incredibly long build times. Have fun with Vivado :)

  • @JayAntoney
    @JayAntoney 9 месяцев назад +1

    First time seeing one of your videos! Loved it & got a sub from me. Looking forward to watching the project grow

  • @veralium29
    @veralium29 8 месяцев назад

    This is like an upgraded crane, almost, but more mobile and smaller. Great work, would love to build one of these for myself and see what they do. Integration of large machines like this could eventually become a large exoskeleton like the AMP suit, or some sort of mech. Love to see what you're doing with this later, you've got a like and sub. Keep it up man. 👍

  • @briansites8476
    @briansites8476 8 месяцев назад

    Really interesting and look forward to seeing more. Thank you.

  • @kensgold
    @kensgold 9 месяцев назад +4

    If you do need to desolder those mosfets at 13:18 , its not that hard to get them off in one go. Take a paperclip or similar thickness piece of uninsulated copper wire, and solder it to each of the through hole components legs with a big blob of solder. Then heat the wire up with a large soldering iron tip. The wire transfers the irons heat to each of the legs pretty equally, and you can just pull the component out from the other side of the board.

    • @peejay1981
      @peejay1981 9 месяцев назад +2

      Also, a syringe style solder sucker can work well.

  • @AdaptivePhenix
    @AdaptivePhenix 8 месяцев назад +2

    Here's the problem. Almost nobody is aware of the Parallax P2.... _THE_ most incredible microcontroller ever conceived and a motion-control developer's dream 😎
    "most common microcontrollers won't cut it"
    "the controller doesn't need to keep track of millions of pulses/sec"
    "ten megabits without using any processing time"
    Trivial for the P2. It has 8 X 32bit parallel processors and 64 "smartpins". The smartpins are almost like 64 extra processors in their own right. Any 2 pins can be configured for quadrature counting @ _sysclock/4_ 😧 (in my case 250MHz/4). Once configured for quad-counting, they count even when all eight processors are doing nothing.
    Wanna read, say 28 encoders at a higher rate than anything out there? Child's play.
    However, this wouldn't leave pins available for anything else. My development is six axes but my preference is dual-loop feedback (feedback from the motor + feedback from the actual load) so I have 12 encoder channels.
    For motor command, I prefer the +/- 10v that has been the industry standard since forever. So now, I configure six smartpins as 16-bit DACs. This can be _real_ DACs or it can be PWM.
    The eight parallel processors may sound a bit daunting but they absolutely are not. The beauty of so many processors, sharing memory and I/O is that one can forget about using interrupts and the nastiness that comes with them.
    Parallax has their own programming language, Spin (interpreter). However, there is a wonderful suite (free), called FlexProp (compiler) which supports C, Basic and PASM (Parallax assembly). Languages can be mixed.
    OMRON purchased Delta Tau's PMAC and now they boast "worlds fastest PID...5 axes in 25usec". P2 can run 6 axes, an order of magnitude faster.
    Forget the FPGA nonsense and grab the "P2 Edge" module for

  • @hillibilli5493
    @hillibilli5493 9 месяцев назад

    I Love your vision! Keep it up, one more fan won right now! Greetings from Germany Julian

  • @tweebs1
    @tweebs1 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing... I only wish I had spent my early EE days learning FPGAs... I don't think my instructors had a clue either. Great overall explanation of the state of options for controlling industrial robots.

  • @H3xx1st
    @H3xx1st 9 месяцев назад +2

    Low voltages caused by high resistance neg/gnd loops or voltage leaks causing positive gnd. Also, back emf can cause dropouts due to the control sigs not having enough disparity between VCC and GND(seen on the oscilloscope with the base voltage jump 4:52)
    Possibly Separate each GND from the motor/actuator from all other controllers

  • @AgainsT1992
    @AgainsT1992 8 месяцев назад

    man this is pure gold, so underrated! Keet it up 🚀

  • @seancollins9745
    @seancollins9745 9 месяцев назад +5

    there's a good chance path blending is causing trouble, set g64 to p0.01 in your INI for the rs242 startup routine. The problem with the encoder handling within linuxcnc, is that it is not done by interupt, and I kinda went on a rant about it a few months ago. I have been working on porting EMC2 to OpenRTOS from TexasInstruments for use on their hardware. But dude, I don't have enough time. I think getting EMC off of linux is where I would start. Then with some work there's a way to fix the short coming of the control software. Keep me aprised though, I have some skills as a C programmer for state type logic and deep mechanical engineering skills.

  • @ellisfletcher3491
    @ellisfletcher3491 2 месяца назад

    Thats seriosuly impressive i love that.. I want to build one in future

  • @MrBennybrice
    @MrBennybrice 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome. You've given me hope for my Fanuc 100!

  • @EletricistaEmBrasilia
    @EletricistaEmBrasilia 8 месяцев назад

    Truly Inspiring, I will follow all the steps.

  • @lukasrambold451
    @lukasrambold451 9 месяцев назад +2

    Have you heard of EtherCAT? It's a network protocol for industrial automation that can do up to 30kHz update rates with low latency and jitter. You would daisy-chain your motor controllers up with using ethernet and hook up the whole thing to a computer that runs the motion control. The chips to do it are surspringly cheap (LAN9252 is ~$10) and can be used with any microcontroller or FPGA. Maybe this could be a fit for this project, as this would make it much more modular and extensible. Adding peripheries or even an additional axis would just be a matter of adding another box to the network.
    (also it wouldn't require to design everything from scratch, there are already a lot of EtherCAT motor drives out there).

    • @ExcessiveOverkill
      @ExcessiveOverkill  9 месяцев назад +1

      I did look into using ethercat but the IP for the fpgas was like $10k. I think I thought the off the shelf chips wouldn't work for some reason, I don't remember exact why rn. I planned on using rs422 which would give me like 30khz updates with no daisy chaining, but I'll look into those chips again.

    • @dkraft
      @dkraft 9 месяцев назад

      @@ExcessiveOverkill This was my gut reaction as well - RS422 but with separate drivers for each motor channel for best throughput. Ethercat is price overkill

    • @AdaptivePhenix
      @AdaptivePhenix 8 месяцев назад +1

      "low latency and jitter" they boast as if it's a _good_ thing ("a little bit pregnant"?). How about _zero_ latency/jitter. It's a world of EMI (PWM), who in their right mind throws around data at such a high rate? Marketing BS.

  • @arsenynekrasov4878
    @arsenynekrasov4878 8 месяцев назад +2

    This is a great thing you're working on. Well designed open source controller would be able to help revive tons of mechanically fine robots with dead electonics. If you'd like some FPGA support, let me know. regards, hypernyan

    • @ExcessiveOverkill
      @ExcessiveOverkill  8 месяцев назад +1

      You should join the discord! I'm working on getting a contribution system planned out so we can begin diving into the coding.

  • @OhaaG
    @OhaaG 8 месяцев назад +1

    Very nice video and super interesting project! Just one advise from my side, if you push the robot (like in 11:14) please have a deadman switch at hand, even if you are 99% sure that nothing can happen.

  • @moistifarius
    @moistifarius 9 месяцев назад

    This is great, glad to see a part two

  • @lewismiles4155
    @lewismiles4155 9 месяцев назад

    Excellent video! Thanks for sharing

  • @play4dayzproductions347
    @play4dayzproductions347 8 месяцев назад

    My guy, you're an absolute Wizz! God Bless!

  • @TravStu22
    @TravStu22 9 месяцев назад

    What a wealth of information. Great work.

  • @KayleMaster
    @KayleMaster 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is the way. Reduce, reuse, recycle. Well done on the effort so far!

  • @morkovija
    @morkovija 9 месяцев назад

    Internet - do your thing. This would be so awesome to have a community around this project

  • @artigeniusStore
    @artigeniusStore 8 месяцев назад

    you work as a genius. but i think open source for industry robot is imposible. just the dream. thanks for your great work. waiting for your next content.

  • @MrWaalkman
    @MrWaalkman 9 месяцев назад +2

    Looks like a robot out of the Body shop in a GM plant. :) I hope that you weren't hanging off of that robot while it was live...

  • @Techn0man1ac
    @Techn0man1ac 4 месяца назад

    Good luck 👍

  • @geraldzrivi
    @geraldzrivi 9 месяцев назад

    Man, You are crazy! I wish You luck.

  • @SoCalFreelance
    @SoCalFreelance 6 дней назад

    Nice troubleshooting 👌

  • @pommeswerfer571
    @pommeswerfer571 8 месяцев назад

    You are blowing my mind

  • @mx4evaNZ
    @mx4evaNZ 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent effort

  • @Larock-wu1uu
    @Larock-wu1uu 8 месяцев назад

    You are an absolute madlad! Awesome!

  • @matejkuka797
    @matejkuka797 8 месяцев назад

    I love your videos my man

  • @PJgearhead
    @PJgearhead 5 месяцев назад

    So cool. Keep it up!

  • @100000suns
    @100000suns 8 месяцев назад +1

    First time here and already know where the channel name comes from, looking at the linear guide and block for the revised pen holder. 👍

  • @NicksStuff
    @NicksStuff 3 месяца назад

    This is fascinating

  • @NateD77
    @NateD77 8 месяцев назад

    Can't wait to see Rob (RO8) cutting some interesting stuff with its router spindle.

  • @rcircuit96
    @rcircuit96 8 месяцев назад +1

    I would love an inexpensive HV motor driver like that! I do quite a bit of motion control/robotics/embedded systems as a hobby, and my day job is industrial control systems, so I actually have a few motors laying around it would be nice to have drivers for. and a project like this really gets me excited!
    it would be great fun if that could run with a 480VAC supply, as that would be easy and cheap enough to rig up a transformer for in a residential setting, and could run some really high performance motors. but then you got to deal with the nearly 700V peak to peak voltage...
    I don't see very many quadrature/incremental encoders in my day-day, they have largely been replaced by EnDAT, Hiperface DSL, and SSI. I've even dealt with a few that go direct to EtherCAT.
    as you mentioned, an FPGA could certainly talk to all of those protocols, however a lot of modern micro-controllers have some kind of programmable hardware fabric that could likely be convinced to speak most of those protocols outside of the actual CPU. Cypress's PSoC architecture, and the Ras-Pi RP2040's PIO state machines both come to mind as possible options that would be ~1/10 the cost.
    Thanks for the awesome niche content. definitely cant wait to see where this goes!

  • @adammontgomery7980
    @adammontgomery7980 8 месяцев назад

    Good luck! I've stayed away from FPGAs because I just consider them above my pay grade. I'm not afraid to jump into unknown waters, but it's already hard enough learning how to write and debug embedded MCU code, not to mention motor control stuff.

  • @wildgophers91
    @wildgophers91 9 месяцев назад +1

    Weirdly, I've been noodling doing the exact same thing. Using FPGAs to handle encoders. I can only wish you the best of luck because this seems like a TREMENDOUS undertaking.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 8 месяцев назад

      Why not run a dedicated microcontroller per encoder? Won't a 80MHz controller be able to sample the encoder and sent the count upon a request? They have interupt gpio so you never miss a pulse.
      At 80MHz you would have many instructons to sample at 3kHz.

  • @joshmdmd
    @joshmdmd 8 месяцев назад

    this video makes me want to get back into this stuff. I joined the discord. my background is mechatronics. I ran a machine shop for 5 years. I know machining, best practice for design, and a little bit of general programming and about microcontrollers, but never took the dive into making my own boards. I always saw H Bridges and thought it was criminal how they were priced. It makes any hobby project relatively expensive (especially for people still in school who are interested in this sort of stuff like grade 12 through university).

  • @user-cr4sc1ht9t
    @user-cr4sc1ht9t 9 месяцев назад

    That flexure pen mount looks cool

  • @tuskiomisham
    @tuskiomisham 9 месяцев назад +1

    Oh woah! he's back!

  • @Louishall86
    @Louishall86 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome work!

  • @RyanMacala
    @RyanMacala 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome work.

  • @jimmykreutz6087
    @jimmykreutz6087 8 месяцев назад

    I'm a purely mechanical guy, but this is some Deep nerd stuff right here, not in an arrogant way tho just waaay deeper than I could comprehend

  • @paulharvey6719
    @paulharvey6719 8 месяцев назад +1

    your garage is the Bat Cave!!

  • @ReasonableSwampMonster
    @ReasonableSwampMonster 8 месяцев назад

    Just found this channel and subscribed within the first 43 seconds this is the shit.

  • @phildegruy9295
    @phildegruy9295 4 месяца назад

    Something that might be interesting to some. A particular company I worked for had some of the first Fanuc (cast on the robots was GMFanuc) industrial robots in production as paint robots. If the robot(s) were powered off or lost power through an e-stop or some other reason, or had to have a new encoder installed on an axis, we would need "remaster the robot" which involved installing a special mastering fixture onto the robot, fold the robot up into the fixture by releasing brakes and physically moving the various axis into their zero position on the fixture and pin it to the fixture, then relax the robot after it was pinned. Then go to the robot controller and read the current encoder values from the terminal, compare it to the factory zero master encoder value on the master chart for that robot and axis then add or subtract an offset value so the actual value would equal the master value, then enter the adjusted value into the axis through the terminal save it and go to the next axis. This was then the known zero position of each axis that had any errors adjusted out.

  • @irkedoff
    @irkedoff 9 месяцев назад +1

    I hope the drive goes well.

  • @dancarrier2378
    @dancarrier2378 9 месяцев назад

    Have you looked into using the dynamotion kflop for motion control?

  • @skaa9217
    @skaa9217 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks!