Machsupport Forum

Third party software and hardware support forums. => SmoothStepper USB => Topic started by: WEMME on August 04, 2009, 03:17:50 AM

Title: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: WEMME on August 04, 2009, 03:17:50 AM
Hello Does anyone know what the mimimum pc specs for mach3 with Smooth stepper are?
Obviously the spec for Mach3 using a parallel port will be much more demanding than with smooth stepper.

Regards
Bart
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on August 04, 2009, 05:40:17 AM
Just a case of try and see I suppose, the most important thing is likely to be whether the USB is good enough or not. I have used a Toshiba Satellite with 256meg memory and a 700MHz processor and it worked fine.
Hood
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: WEMME on August 04, 2009, 05:20:42 PM
Ok Thanks,
I'm eyeing up a touch screeen pc with simlar specs using xp tablet.
Regards
Bart
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on August 04, 2009, 05:33:48 PM
Oh maybe worth saying was the laptop has W2K on it, XP would need a bit more memory I would think.
 As for small PCs, I use the Via Pico on my lathe and mill, its (or was, not sure if it still is) the smallest mobo you could buy, it measures 100mm x 72mm and is not much bigger than the smoothstepper itself. Its a 1Gig embedded CPU and I have 1 Gig memory on them. Below is a pic of the one in the mills cabinet, arrow pointing to mobo and SS.

Hood
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: RICH on August 04, 2009, 05:39:05 PM
Notice how nice and neat Hood's wiring , etc is inside the controller.
I bet the shop is the same!

RICH
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: RICH on August 04, 2009, 05:44:19 PM
Bart,
These days I don't think using an old dead dog of a PC is worth it since you can get used pc's that are fast and with a lot of memory cheaply . BTW i run the SS with a 400MHZ laptop and 256 memory, XP pro, once in a while.

RICH
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on August 04, 2009, 05:45:58 PM
Notice how nice and neat Hood's wiring , etc is inside the controller.
I bet the shop is the same!

RICH

Think you are taking the p*** there, you have obviously seen the pics :D
Hood
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: RICH on August 04, 2009, 05:47:49 PM
 YEP  ;)  >:D
RICH
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on August 04, 2009, 05:50:23 PM
Well I have news for you, its actually got a bit of a view of the floor at the moment, I got my old workshop (GRP cabin) moved accross behind the workshop now and have a lot of the stock and general crap moved into it. :)

Hood
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: RICH on August 04, 2009, 05:54:47 PM
I hear ya, just like mine probably, in that when you run out of floor space, the stuff goes vertical or is hung from the ceilling.   ;D
RICH
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on August 04, 2009, 05:57:50 PM
:D
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: jeep534 on October 10, 2011, 08:32:40 AM
Oh maybe worth saying was the laptop has W2K on it, XP would need a bit more memory I would think.
 As for small PCs, I use the Via Pico on my lathe and mill, its (or was, not sure if it still is) the smallest mobo you could buy, it measures 100mm x 72mm and is not much bigger than the smoothstepper itself. Its a 1Gig embedded CPU and I have 1 Gig memory on them. Below is a pic of the one in the mills cabinet, arrow pointing to mobo and SS.

Hood
hood could you please describe the components that are in the picture and why you used them i am just really curious as there seems to be a lot of stuff there what appears to be a power supply seems to be bigger than everything else.
Thanks
archie =) =) =) 
Title: Re: Minimum pc specs with Smooth stepper.
Post by: Hood on October 14, 2011, 07:04:11 AM
Didnt get a notification for some reason so missed your question until now.

Ok black power supply is a standard PC power supply, could have used a miniature one suitable for the Pico mobo but I had that one so used it.
There  is the Via Pico mobo of course there is the SS and then a PMDX 122 BOB and below them is another BOB its an Acustep that Ed at CNC Building Blocks used to make.
On the side are relay boards to take the 5v and convert to 24v and then that is the connections below that for my servo drives. On the door is a DL05 PLC. The PLC makes easy integration of my servo drives and Mach and also allows safety features to be easily integrated, things such as the power drawbar not being able to operate if the spindle is in motion and vice versa, also makes it easy to add buttons on panels, FRO and SRO pots etc.

Hood

Hood