RE: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] EMI BDI Instal
Posted by
Tim Goldstein
on 2001-05-05 10:57:43 UTC
Here are my non-expert opinions for a reasonable EMC computer based upon my
personal experience with non-BDI installs of EMC and reading posts from
trusted poster. Your Mileage May Vary.
My EMC experience says it depends and it seems to be based upon the motion
module you are running.
For a true servo system with a STG card:
Jon Elson tells us his servo based EMC system runs great on a Pentium
Classic 100. I have zero experience with this configuration, but trust Jon's
experience.
For stepper systems (or Gecko step and direction servos):
My experience with the stepper versions say that you need a little more
processor power than a STG install requires. If you are running steppermod a
200 mhz system seems to be about the minimum. If running freqmod then a 333
or better seems to be more appropriate. If you need really high pulse rates
increase by 50%.
I have run EMC on 32 mb, 64 mb, and 96 mb of memory. All seemed to work just
fine. I don't know what the minimum hard drive space requirement for the BDI
is, but I installed it on a 1.2 gb partition and it fit with LOTS of
remaining room using the complete install option on the BDI disk. For video
cards I have had good luck using PCI S3 cards. Also have never had a problem
with PCI based Diamond Speedstar cards. The 6.X Redhat version (what the BDI
is based upon) is suppose to work well with AGP, but I have no experience
with
this. Best bet is take a look at the compatibility lists on the RedHat site.
Doug Fortune wrote the following regarding video cards:
I definately have an opinion there. Linux systems LOVE Nvidia
http://www.nvidia.com/ TNT, TNT2, Geforce, and Geforce2 cards (I have had
one or several of each of the above - all by Asus). They ROCK! Just got my
second Asus7100 (Geforce2 w 32 MB).
The reason Linux likes Nvidia so much is that there is a single Linux driver
for all the cards. If a slower card doesn't have a graphics function in
hardware, the equivalent function is emulated
in the software drive.
In particular the Geforce & Geforce2 cards excel in OpenGL, which you are
going to see more and more of, in 3D simulation software.
Tim
[Denver, CO]
personal experience with non-BDI installs of EMC and reading posts from
trusted poster. Your Mileage May Vary.
My EMC experience says it depends and it seems to be based upon the motion
module you are running.
For a true servo system with a STG card:
Jon Elson tells us his servo based EMC system runs great on a Pentium
Classic 100. I have zero experience with this configuration, but trust Jon's
experience.
For stepper systems (or Gecko step and direction servos):
My experience with the stepper versions say that you need a little more
processor power than a STG install requires. If you are running steppermod a
200 mhz system seems to be about the minimum. If running freqmod then a 333
or better seems to be more appropriate. If you need really high pulse rates
increase by 50%.
I have run EMC on 32 mb, 64 mb, and 96 mb of memory. All seemed to work just
fine. I don't know what the minimum hard drive space requirement for the BDI
is, but I installed it on a 1.2 gb partition and it fit with LOTS of
remaining room using the complete install option on the BDI disk. For video
cards I have had good luck using PCI S3 cards. Also have never had a problem
with PCI based Diamond Speedstar cards. The 6.X Redhat version (what the BDI
is based upon) is suppose to work well with AGP, but I have no experience
with
this. Best bet is take a look at the compatibility lists on the RedHat site.
Doug Fortune wrote the following regarding video cards:
I definately have an opinion there. Linux systems LOVE Nvidia
http://www.nvidia.com/ TNT, TNT2, Geforce, and Geforce2 cards (I have had
one or several of each of the above - all by Asus). They ROCK! Just got my
second Asus7100 (Geforce2 w 32 MB).
The reason Linux likes Nvidia so much is that there is a single Linux driver
for all the cards. If a slower card doesn't have a graphics function in
hardware, the equivalent function is emulated
in the software drive.
In particular the Geforce & Geforce2 cards excel in OpenGL, which you are
going to see more and more of, in 3D simulation software.
Tim
[Denver, CO]
> -----Original Message-----
> Tim, thanks for the response.
> I am currently using an old IBM Thinkpad running deskNC, Dan's 2A
> controller board to a home brew sherline CNC conversion.
> My plan was to put BDI EMC on my main computer for practice and
> familiarization.
> and then procure an old computer for CNC use with EMC.
> However, I think I will now get another computer for EMC.
> What should be the minimum or desirable capability to run EMC?
> Thanks again, Don
> FAQ: http://www.ktmarketing.com/faq.html
Discussion Thread
Don Carlson
2001-05-05 06:43:28 UTC
EMI BDI Instal
Tim Goldstein
2001-05-05 10:57:43 UTC
RE: [CAD_CAM_EDM_DRO] EMI BDI Instal