Well, the Yamaha YV100's that i bought at the auction have been picked up from LabTams old premises and will be delivered to a top secrect location in Melbourne Australia, for a few weeks, until i get there, where i'll be preparing and crating them up for shipping to New Zealand. I'm the meantime been doing some digging and have discovered that pretty much all of the IO to run the machine is exposed. 168 ins and 190 outs approx! This sets up the possiblity of the conversion to OpenPNP a much more realsitic proposition.
Why not buying old vintage win95 PC with is a slots and running some tsr utility to slow down and sleep CPU before these utilitys disappears.
Prices for such PC is low. Further USB floppy disk emulator is nice, but floppy disk on USB is another viable possibility, just hard to find this time at least in Europe.
>I think it's a lot of works ,
for example clamping, PCB pusher, movable toolpin, pressure plate, smema and conveyor interface incl. Sensor.
do you not need more or what PNP do you have planned for higher component and pitch below 0.5mm? The speed reduction is principally because of taking image of single components sequentially and waiting for that instead of taking picture during movement. Further using polling instead of queuing for motions commands.
Why not buying old vintage win95 PC with is a slots and running some tsr utility to slow down and sleep CPU before these utilitys disappears.
Prices for such PC is low. Further USB floppy disk emulator is nice, but floppy disk on USB is another viable possibility, just hard to find this time at least in Europe
.
The nice thing is that since i have two machines, theres a good chance i use one and play with one.
My big fear is that the controller boards will fry and getting parts might be troublesome.
I think it's a lot of works , for example clamping, PCB pusher, movable toolpin, pressure plate, smema and conveyor interface incl. Sensor.
Programming safety keepout positions, and I think max speed will be 30% from actual speed, where programming with pcbsynergy is probably easier and faster. As max component height is 6.3mm,
do you not need more or what PNP do you have planned for higher component and pitch below 0.5mm? The speed reduction is principally because of taking image of single components sequentially and waiting for that instead of taking picture during movement. Further using polling instead of queuing for motions commands.
Why not buying old vintage win95 PC with is a slots and running some tsr utility to slow down and sleep CPU before these utilitys disappears.
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Nice work. Can I have that mad gantry router in the background?
On 2 October 2016 at 22:33, Andrew Frazer <andrew...@stellascapes.com> wrote:
Well, first job done. the two machiens have been safetly extracted out of Labtam and are in a safe warehouse so i can get them ready to export to NZ in a couple of weeks.
On Friday, September 30, 2016 at 7:28:47 PM UTC+13, Andrew Frazer wrote:Well, the Yamaha YV100's that i bought at the auction have been picked up from LabTams old premises and will be delivered to a top secrect location in Melbourne Australia, for a few weeks, until i get there, where i'll be preparing and crating them up for shipping to New Zealand. I'm the meantime been doing some digging and have discovered that pretty much all of the IO to run the machine is exposed. 168 ins and 190 outs approx! This sets up the possiblity of the conversion to OpenPNP a much more realsitic proposition.These machines are rock solid meachnically, but are running 1990's styled vision.. Swapping them over to a more modern control system and vision will turn these into extremely capable machines..
While i think i proably got a real bargin, i have seen similar machines for sale for 10-15k.. However there may well be broken machines that are much cheaper, and it woudl seem we probalby only the arms,legs of the thing, not the brains/eyes. I'd say it woudl be realistic to get a failed machine in the region of $4-5k.. Clearly this is not a machine for home use, it needs 3phase power and weighs 1500kg..
Since i have two of them, i'll probably be able to run one in "Yamaha" mode, while i tinker with the other one.. This was'tn the path i was headed down, but its looking like the possiblitys are really good!
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Probably the most common cause of failure with an old of motherboard is from the battery in the real time clock ic leaking and damaging the board. It would probably pay to get rid of the battery(clock only advances while the machine is on) or make it so it is externally mountable.
The other common fault was ram.
Well, the two Machines are on the floor and have power on them. A few little jobs needed doing to get them running again. The Monitor cables had been cut but that was an easy fix and i've replaed the old CRT's with new LCDS.The machines have VIOS 1.22 on them. VIOS is Yamahas Operating system, and wow its a dinosaur. Its complex and confusing.
Assuming it is still much the same as my CSM, there are two major files you need to set up for each job. One is the placement file, it lists the board size, fiducials, and then the components, one per line, with feeder location, head, and X, Y and rotation.
I wrote some small C programs to take my CAM system's output and turn it into the placement file. I still do the feeder file manually, usually on the machine, but then save it on a PC
You can find these files in the files section of this group. Another member added a bunch more functionality to these programs, but I've forgotten where he put the source.
Assuming it is still much the same as my CSM, there are two major files you need to set up for each job. One is the placement file, it lists the board size, fiducials, and then the components, one per line, with feeder location, head, and X, Y and rotation.
Ok, i've been able to create that placmeent file ok, using pcbsynergy. ( http://members.iinet.net.au/~sarason/ ) which is a pretty handy bit of code.
>The other is the feeder file, and it tells what size feeder is in each location, pick up orientation, coordinates if a non-standard feeder or more info if a >tray. I saw your machine has vision, so there is another file that specifies the pads and other info for the vision system to properly align the part. I >don't have vision on my system, so I don't know much about that.
yeah its got three cameras in it. How do you create this 'feeder' file and import it?
How do you export any files off the machine.. I cnat' seem to do that.
My machine only has an RS-232 serial port. You set up the comm parameters in the CMU menu.
Not sure if your machine may have something newer than serial.
Anyway, you mostly set up a 3-wire null modem cable between the P&P and a PC serial port, and use a serial comm program that has file save and file send capability. (I use minicom on a Linux system, there are similar things for Windows OS's.)
It sounds like you do not have the manual for your machine.
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Are these running DC servos? If so, feel free to take the schematics and/or board design of what I made for my Siemens machines :)
On 10 January 2017 at 11:01, Andrew Frazer <andrew...@stellascapes.com> wrote:
On Wednesday, January 11, 2017 at 6:03:36 AM UTC+13, Jon Elson wroteMy machine only has an RS-232 serial port. You set up the comm parameters in the CMU menu.
Not sure if your machine may have something newer than serial.Yeah, newer.. 3.5" Floppy Disks!Anyway, you mostly set up a 3-wire null modem cable between the P&P and a PC serial port, and use a serial comm program that has file save and file send capability. (I use minicom on a Linux system, there are similar things for Windows OS's.)
It sounds like you do not have the manual for your machine.I've got hte 'operation' manual and the 'maintaince manual', but no reference manual. Theres big hunks of 'knowledge' missing thats for sure.That is like flying blind! I have several generations of the manuals for my machine, the first version is a REALLY bad translation and organization job, it is clear they rewrote it several times. No idea how good or bad the Yamaha manuals might be, I've had bad luck with a few Japanese manuals that were NOT written by native English speakers well versed in the field.
Hopefully, you can get hold of a copy of a manual for it. If Philips/Assembleon sold a version of the machine under their label, such a manual might be easier to find.
Jon
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