Overloaded; My first DC servo and Gecko 320 arrive on Tuesday, so sayeth Brown.
CNC Brain, however is not on the menu at this point, although I do plan to follow it's progress if I have the time to do so.
As I said, I only did a quick scan of the CNC Brain site and I was not aware it used linear scales, but linear scales are nothing new. I had them on my little el-cheapo Mini mill before I converted it to CNC. I had not considered getting feedback from a linear scale, but it makes a lot of sense. Absolute is always going to be more reliable than relative positioning.
Hood; I am not interested in blazing new trails in home grown retro CNC. An engineer is, by definition conservative, skeptical, anal, and only interested in facts. The CNC Brain may not be ready for prime time, but the idea is very valid and the apporoach, if it is developed fully, would solve the issues I was pointing to, and at an entry level price point. AS I have already said several times, these capabilities we have been discussing are not new. Machining centers incorporate ths technology and have for some time.
Getting anything remotely similar for $500 or $600 would definately be something new, as are servo motors under $100 and $30 encoders, apparently.
It appears that the CNC Brain is being developed by a very small outfit, so, like most of the other suppliers to the CNC retrofit community , including Artsoft, it takes a while to get things accomplished.
I just feel strongly that discounting new technology simply because it is not fully developed or based on the cost of a single component is not a good strategy. If one were to evaluate, for example, the Gecko 540 on price alone, it would look expensive, but it has 4 drives in it. The smooth stepper has a way to go before everything is implimented the way people (including yourself) want. The only way to look at a CNC retrofit, in my opinion, it to set your criteria and then compare the total system cost of the alternatives that meet the criteria.
One of those criteria, of course can be that certain features must be fully functional right now, today. Mach has been around for quite a while and it seems they are just now getting threading to work right. I don't know of any bug free software that is under active development. I also know of no software that does not have a wish list associated with it.
There is a saying . . 'it is what it is'.
I'll say this, if I made my living off my CNC machines, I would definately be following CNC Brain and any other promising technology, unless I had the cash to plunk down on a machining center.
Lastly, were I to purchase CNC Brain, which actually would make sense in some ways as I am very interested in new technologies and at my hobby level, I don't need to make money with the machines or have tight production dealines, so beta products are not a critical issue for me . . hell, I've had the Windoes 7 beta runing since day one availability . .

but in any event, I would not be posting the progress of CNC Brain on a Mach forum . . that would make no sense.