My machine has been working fine for the last 4 months. I have done many carves with no problems. Occasionally the machine would not complete the homing sequence. But most times it got pretty close to tripping the switches and a second home command did the trick.
Having a bit of down time, I set out to “fix” the problem by changing the wires and using 2 conductor shielded cable. I got 22 gauge wire.
After re-wiring I tried the machine and much to my surprise I got the same behavior as I was getting with the twisted pair. I read on the Forum about how to connect the shied on the cable properly and I although I thought I had it right, I could perhaps do better. Let me explain: After the wiring was installed I connected the shield of the cable to the ground on the gshield, This is negative of the 24V power supply.
Reading on the Forum I decided that I should really connect the shield on the cable to “real” ground, that is the green/yellow wire coming from the wall plug to the power supply.
Now, all I get is a couple of bursts of movement, in the right direction on Z first, then on X and Y. Not enough movement to reach the homing switches. UGCS seems to think the homing sequence completed as it shows an OK status and the red banner goes away.
I have checked the switches monitoring the gshield status, after setting $10=19, and there is no noise on any of the homing switches and when tripped manually they show the proper status, 001 for X, 010 for Y and 100 for Z. If I disconnect the ground to shield connection I do see noise from the switches.
Since the switches appear to be working and the signal is clean (and the behavior is exactly the same every time) I thought the gshield is fine as it can see the signals changing.
I have re-flashed the arduino and even tried a second one, no change. I hope this is not a gshield problem.
As a side note, I can move all axis in all directions with no hesitation at all. Homing switches remain noiseless when moving the gantry in all directions.
I don’t know what else to try and would appreciate any and all assistance.
just head over to Radio shack if you can still find an open one, or the parts online and build the filter or buy one from me . You’ll be up and running in no time. Trying to zero in on noise without a good oscillator and a lot of experience is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. It’s so much easier to just filter it out.