personally i think we should accept those parts, but
we've been getting
rid of
a lot of unnecessary stuff from sudoroom recently (well mostly not me
doing it)
so anything that we get from them that doesn't belong in sudoroom will get
recycled if nobody else wants it. I will say that the last stuff we got
from
them seems to be pretty decently useful, most of it, so that's a good sign.
I don't think we want the carousels though, they seem like the kind of
thing
you use in a factory where you have plenty of space and need random access
fast, whereas we are only going to survive in sudoroom if we can store
stuff
densely and compensate by keeping good records of where stuff is parked.
OK - I'll try to take some pictures of the carousel on Thursday, so people
can see what I'm talking about. I do think it provides for some very dense
storage, and would likely come with a ton of other through-hole electronic
parts, connectors and mounting components if we're willing to take the
entire thing. Conversely, if I just take the trays with the SMD components,
I'd have several dozen small trays that would need a rack to go into...
Patrik
-jake
On Wed, 26 Jul 2017, Patrik D'haeseleer wrote:
By the way - I may be able to get a bunch more surface mount components,
> from the same lab from which I brought over several boxes full of spools
> before. I assume we want those?
>
> BioCurious had originally called dibs on two giant 6ft tall 4-sided
> carousels of electronic parts that included a bunch of trays with SMD
> parts. But now they're just taking up space in their new lab, and they
> want
> to shrink down a bit. We may even be able to get an entire parts carousel.
>
> Patrik
>
>
> On Wed, Jul 26, 2017 at 1:46 AM, Jake <jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
>
> OK i renamed the repository to pos2charmhigh to match the true name
>> so the new link is:
>>
>>
https://github.com/sudoroom/pos2charmhigh/
>>
>> Miloh was doing some work on the machine earlier tonight, but he's into
>> using
>> GEDA not KiCAD, but i'm sure his contributions will lift all boats.
>>
>> you can push to:
>> git@github.com:sudoroom/pos2charmhigh.git
>>
>> thank you
>> -jake
>>
>> On Tue, 25 Jul 2017, Morgan Allen wrote:
>>
>> there was a rational behind calling the repo pcb2... but... dunno
>>
>>>
>>> Anyhow, pos2... is for the fact the KiCad outputs .pos (position) files.
>>>
>>> Feel free to collaborate where ever, hopefully no one forces you to sign
>>> up
>>> for GitHub.
>>>
>>> As for future updates, I can push where ever is most useful.
>>>
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> --------------
>>> 2017 Hackaday Prize Entry
>>> Any Colored Button <https://hackaday.io/project/1
>>> 9880-any-colored-button>
>>>
>>> Step 1. Press Button
>>> Step 2. ***startupy hand waving***
>>> Step 3. Profit!
>>>
>>> Likes = Votes. Votes = $1s. $1s = Profits.
>>>
>>> Step 2 = Vote for Any Colored Button
>>> <https://hackaday.io/project/19880-any-colored-button>.
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jul 25, 2017 at 11:26 PM, Jake <jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
>>>
>>> Morgan, i am confused, what's the difference between pcb2charmhigh and
>>>
>>>> pos2charmhigh?
>>>>
>>>> I have pcb2charmhigh which i got from github here:
>>>>
https://gitlab.com/morganrallen/pcb2charmhigh.git/
>>>>
>>>> i can't find the source to pos2charmhigh because gitlab doesn't
seem to
>>>> allow
>>>> me to view the source, if it's even there, without creating a
login...
>>>> which I
>>>> don't want to do, partially because they're trying to force me
to.
>>>>
>>>> Anyway, I forked pcb2charmhigh to a sudoroom repository here:
>>>>
https://github.com/sudoroom/pcb2charmhigh
>>>>
>>>> so that I and Miloh and others can collaborate on it.
>>>>
>>>> Will you be updating the pcb2charmhigh repo on gitlab? At least I can
>>>> pull from there.
>>>>
>>>> thank you,
>>>> -jake
>>>>
>>>> On Sun, 9 Apr 2017, Morgan Allen wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I worked on a thing today.
>>>>
>>>>
https://www.npmjs.com/package/pos2charmhigh
>>>>>
>>>>> (roughly) converts KiCAD .pos files to something that resembles the
>>>>> Charmhigh CSV file. I haven't tested the output yet.
>>>>>
>>>>> Jake, when you did your first test run did you run into any issues
>>>>> with
>>>>> negative X/Y coords? When I was trying to set a component local [ 0,
>>>>> 0 ]
>>>>> was about 1.5" right of the actual components. I could jog it
into
>>>>> place
>>>>> once with no problem. Then I'd get an error about a negative
>>>>> position. I
>>>>> might make it back later tonight to do some more testing.
>>>>>
>>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>> --------------
>>>>> 2017 Hackaday Prize Entry
>>>>> Any Colored Button <https://hackaday.io/project/1
>>>>> 9880-any-colored-button>
>>>>>
>>>>> Step 1. Press Button
>>>>> Step 2. ***startupy hand waving***
>>>>> Step 3. Profit!
>>>>>
>>>>> Likes = Votes. Votes = $1s. $1s = Profits.
>>>>>
>>>>> Step 2 = Vote for Any Colored Button
>>>>> <https://hackaday.io/project/19880-any-colored-button>.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 3:24 PM, Jake <jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> the machine menu is entirely in english.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> awesome job translating!
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, 15 Feb 2017, miloh wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> are there english menu options?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> used google translate to get some menu image translations in
case
>>>>>>> there aren't any.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 2:42 PM, miloh
<froggytoad(a)gmail.com>
>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> chrome browser reads the unicode chinese characters in your
text
>>>>>>> file.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
http://spaz.org/~jake/pix/pnp/placeonepart.txt
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> google translate makes a lot of sense with these
strings.
>>>>>>>> the pinyin is useful for cafl speakers who dont read as
much hanyu
>>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>> sound out everything
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> %,原点偏移,X,Y,
>>>>>>>> %,Yuándiǎn piān yí,X,Y,
>>>>>>>> %,origin offset,X,Y
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> %,料栈偏移,料栈号,X,Y,进给量,注释
>>>>>>>> %, Liào zhàn piān yí, liào zhàn hào,X,Y, jìn jǐ liàng,
zhùshì
>>>>>>>> %, Material stack offset, material stack number, X, Y,
feed,
>>>>>>>> comment
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> this might befor arrays.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> %,拼板1,X,Y,
>>>>>>>> %, Pīn bǎn 1,X,Y,
>>>>>>>> %, Puzzle 1, X, Y,
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> you had me at 'puzzle'
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> %,贴头号,料栈号,X,Y,角度,高度,跳过,速度,说明,注释
>>>>>>>> %, Tiē tóuhào, liào zhàn hào,X,Y, jiǎodù, gāodù, tiàoguò,
sùdù,
>>>>>>>> shuōmíng, zhùshì
>>>>>>>> %, Sticker number, material number, X, Y, angle, height,
skip,
>>>>>>>> speed,
>>>>>>>> description, comment
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> good bits here
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 2:29 PM, Jake
<jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> last night i programmed the pick&place machine to
place a capacitor
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> from
>>>>>>>>> material slot 3 onto this board, rotating 90 degrees
in the
>>>>>>>>> process,
>>>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>> placing it perfectly.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> here's the video:
>>>>>>>>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuNQKG_SQ30
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> anyway, i made the machine save the program to a .csv
file which
>>>>>>>>> it
>>>>>>>>> named
>>>>>>>>> new1.csv and then i copied it and inserted comments
for us to
>>>>>>>>> discuss,
>>>>>>>>> each
>>>>>>>>> delineated by a # sign. Note that I do not expect
the machine to
>>>>>>>>> allow
>>>>>>>>> comments in .csv files it's given, but i wanted
to show where my
>>>>>>>>> comments
>>>>>>>>> were.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I don't know what the upper-ASCII encoding is,
but it's surely
>>>>>>>>> chinese,
>>>>>>>>> so
>>>>>>>>> if
>>>>>>>>> anyone can figure out how to convert and translate it
that might
>>>>>>>>> help
>>>>>>>>> us.
>>>>>>>>> Also
>>>>>>>>> the manual is in Chinese so lets translate that too.
>>>>>>>>> anyway, i made the machine save the program to a .csv
file which
>>>>>>>>> it
>>>>>>>>> named
>>>>>>>>> new1.csv and then i copied it and inserted comments
for us to
>>>>>>>>> discuss,
>>>>>>>>> each
>>>>>>>>> delineated by a # sign. Note that I do not expect
the machine to
>>>>>>>>> allow
>>>>>>>>> comments in .csv files it's given, but i wanted
to show where my
>>>>>>>>> comments
>>>>>>>>> were.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I don't know what the upper-ASCII encoding is,
but it's surely
>>>>>>>>> chinese,
>>>>>>>>> so
>>>>>>>>> if
>>>>>>>>> anyone can figure out how to convert and translate it
that might
>>>>>>>>> help
>>>>>>>>> us.
>>>>>>>>> Also
>>>>>>>>> the original manual is in Chinese in a .rar file,
although there
>>>>>>>>> seems
>>>>>>>>> to be
>>>>>>>>> a
>>>>>>>>> .PDF version of it in english, are they the same?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> anyway here's the files:
>>>>>>>>>
http://spaz.org/~jake/pix/pnp/
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> of course the next step is to add more steps to the
program at the
>>>>>>>>> machine,
>>>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>>> tell it to make multiple boards, so that we can suss
out what
>>>>>>>>> those
>>>>>>>>> other
>>>>>>>>> lines
>>>>>>>>> are for. although to be honest i haven't read
the manual yet and
>>>>>>>>> maybe
>>>>>>>>> it's
>>>>>>>>> all explained in there.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> -jake
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
>>
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>>
>>
>>