Jump to content

Is there a way to control a qualification characteristic's movements?


---
 Share

Recommended Posts

Our reference sphere is on the opposite side of the CMM from the styli holder, on SOME styli on SOME positions it does its Z- movement first then the X and Y movements. Is there a way to change this? The way it is currently moving is causing it to potentially crash into fixtures/parts/stands etc. I cant think of a way to add in move points since we are running purely characteristics.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Without seeing your program, the only thing I can currently think of would be to split the probes in question into multiple qualification characteristics, that way you can control which tips it qualifies first via the order of the characteristics
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I do have it setup that way(If I am understanding you correctly) and changing the order does help but there are still a few dangerous movements in there. The bigger issue is that if one of them comes back bad and needs reran then an operator runs the risk of crashing when running just that single qualification characteristic.

Capture.PNG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Based on the naming it appears that this is a version of what I was talking about. It may be possible to combine some of these items to force the navigation to always occur the way you want, though it will have a slight efficiency cost as the operator will not be able to run just one tip, but would run the whole Characteristic, which may have multiple tips.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I recall from a job I completed at Cummins, they had two reference sphere holders with two reference spheres on each in four different orientations (+Y, -X and +Y, +X).
I think they went into "Automatic stylus system Change" and then "Approach Parameters" and set the "Before Change" and "After Change" Z axis values to "9999".
This forces all probes to clear in the Z axis maximum height prior to X, Y axis movement.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So putting it as 9999 would do Z direction first correct? The smaller distances are done last for approach parameters?

That would explain why this is not an issue on our older machine but is an issue on the newer machine.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rick

I tried that and couldn't see any difference in its movement. Once it was away from the rack it went X then Z then Y. Changing the Z value from 50 to 9999 did not make a difference as far as I could tell. I will keep playing with it

Capture.PNG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thats odd, I talked with the programmer at Cummins, those are the settings they use.
They inspect large diesel engine blocks which sit on risers that are about 200mm tall.
Every tool change moves in and out at Z max height, and it has to, some of their styli are 300mm or more in length.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to view this quote.

Changing the values in the in these dialogs will not impact the order of execution. Setting Z to "9999" is a common setting applied by the ZEISS Metrology Services AEs to ensure the machine always moves to Z+ limit during navigation. Kevin Harold may affirm as that is likely a project he was heavily involved in.

The project mentioned earlier was/is a site with very heavy involvement from the ZEISS MS team for very complex programming requirements and specialized PCM applications. Settings that appear in dialog entries may not have any impact on actual machine navigation or program settings.

If you need special navigation for a specific styli then the proper method is to create a special navigation path for that stylus so it follows set points each time it is run. This can partially be set with "Define Path" buttons in the Approach Parameters window or fully accessed within the Stylus System Management window. These paths can be monotonous to define individually so I would advise only creating for styli that require such navigation.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Controlled to the CMM System. All degrees of freedom are controlled.

Manage Stylus Systems > Stylus > Manual Path is used for a full definition during qualification.

Use the "Approach Parameters > Define Path" window to define special paths during stylus changes.

More info can be found in the CALYPSO Basic manual (C:\Program Files\Zeiss\CALYPSO 7.8\userinfo\manuals\en-US)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to view this quote.

It was Zeiss who initially setup the Prismo's at Cummins (Many years ago), which is where I learned about using 9999 for tool clearing.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...