Just starting to build some cnc equipment. Thank you for your teaching videos. If you get time a video on wire ends/ connectors would be awesome. Like the ones for the arduino pins. male and female connectors. and the proper names. Thank you so much.
Thank you for your support. Arduino boards shouldn't be used for CNC production robots as they are unstable. A Google search on this will reflect the many issues end users have. Thank you, Vince
@@corvetteguy50 thank you so much for the info on Arduino boards. We will look at picking a different board. we are building a cnc plasma cutter and a cnc router.
You should be using an ethernet board/controller as it will provide the most stable platform for your robot. I recommend my UC-400 turnkey package from my store if you're looking for a controller. Thank you, Vince
hi im about to convert a mill over to cnc and ran into something. maybe you can give me your input. i got some nema 34 stepper but the connections for them only come at 18/4 unshielded. i just built my plasma cutter with different motors i had to manually wire and made sure to use shielded cables i could ground with 5 pin connectors. i could remake these cables its just weird shielded wires arnt stock on them. how much would it matter if the first few feet coming off the motors arnt shielded?
Thank you for your support. There's now way to answer your question as its impossible for me to know the shop environment your installing the system in. I will tell you though a few feet is arbitrary, and in best practice using the proper double shielded cable provides end uses piece of mind if they're installed correctly. Thank you, Vince
Great Vince, keep posting, teaching and setting makers on the right path.
Thank you sir for your support. I really appreciate it, and the kind words.
Vince
Just starting to build some cnc equipment. Thank you for your teaching videos. If you get time a video on wire ends/ connectors would be awesome. Like the ones for the arduino pins. male and female connectors. and the proper names. Thank you so much.
Thank you for your support.
Arduino boards shouldn't be used for CNC production robots as they are unstable.
A Google search on this will reflect the many issues end users have. Thank you,
Vince
@@corvetteguy50 thank you so much for the info on Arduino boards. We will look at picking a different board. we are building a cnc plasma cutter and a cnc router.
You should be using an ethernet board/controller as it will provide the most stable platform for your robot. I recommend my UC-400 turnkey package from my store if you're looking for a controller. Thank you,
Vince
Mr Vince thanks I hope you are doing well. Besides what you have said, he is using ferrules that do not match the wire
Thank you for your support, and nice catch. Vince
@@corvetteguy50 Cloud speak about spindles
Don't know what to say about that build. But he wasted a lot of time and money.
Thank you sir for your support.
Its a real shame for any of his audience using his advice as well.
Thank you,
Vince
Any chance you could do a future video just on proper grounding with an HY VFD system and chassis ground?
Here's the video to review. ruclips.net/video/dTKNi0e3qBc/видео.html
Thank you for your support,
Vince
hi im about to convert a mill over to cnc and ran into something. maybe you can give me your input. i got some nema 34 stepper but the connections for them only come at 18/4 unshielded. i just built my plasma cutter with different motors i had to manually wire and made sure to use shielded cables i could ground with 5 pin connectors. i could remake these cables its just weird shielded wires arnt stock on them. how much would it matter if the first few feet coming off the motors arnt shielded?
Thank you for your support. There's now way to answer your question as its impossible for me to know the shop environment your installing the system in.
I will tell you though a few feet is arbitrary, and in best practice using the proper double shielded cable provides end uses piece of mind if they're installed correctly.
Thank you,
Vince