blablinsky
Plastic
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2021
Hello guys,
***edit: sorry to post in wrong forum***
I've recently become a proud owner of the machine in the title, it was purchased as a working thing
and I'd like to make some chips, touching as little as possible (no retrofit this year )
It seems to be in good state, the battery has been changed, the constants are on paper, the monitor is LCD,
the vertical guide looks beautiful with flowers all over the way. Some minor sheetmetal bents here and there.
Unfortunately the documentation is incomplete, only drawings, Schulungsunterlagen and a little spring book for it.
Not sure how many should there be, but I managed to download Heidenhain CNC3000 (Philips 432) manuals, thanks to THIS very forum
and several others for different machines from cncmanual.
Now here is my problem:
I have powered it up and everything started up correctly, all checks passed.
Then I pressed the button right to e-stop along with the 'clear' button.
As long as they were pressed, the pump worked, after releasing it stopped.
Tried several times.
Then I have chosen the X,Y,Z axes and touched the green button to home it.
It has homed, and displays 0,000, 0,000, 0,000 coordinates and the RP letters also.
And that's it.
Now there is a message: ERR I01 I01 displayed and I can do literally nothing.
I have read every single post on the forums and tried the magic combination from this place:
Deckel, Maho, Aciera, Abene Mills > Maho (Phillips432) graphics help please? - Page 2
(hydraulics > hydraulics AND clear > hydraulics AND clear HOLD)
Nothing happens, the screen does not change, the machine does not react.
From the online info I think it is the e-stop circuit because the limit switches has been reached.
There are several ways people approach this problem, by manually moving the axes, by switching homing directions
to get out of limit switches etc.
As I'm very new to the subject and know just next to nothing about these machines, I don't feel at home
with the idea of crushing the ballscrew by entering wrong direction.
I don't know how homing works, does it read the glass scale or just go and wait for the limit switch?
So the first question is what to do to solve this problem and the second is how it is even possible
that such a thing has appeared?
I don't get it, should I manually escape the switches every time I run the machine (no cranks here)?
Does anybody have operator's manual and wiring diagrams for this baby?
***edit: sorry to post in wrong forum***
I've recently become a proud owner of the machine in the title, it was purchased as a working thing
and I'd like to make some chips, touching as little as possible (no retrofit this year )
It seems to be in good state, the battery has been changed, the constants are on paper, the monitor is LCD,
the vertical guide looks beautiful with flowers all over the way. Some minor sheetmetal bents here and there.
Unfortunately the documentation is incomplete, only drawings, Schulungsunterlagen and a little spring book for it.
Not sure how many should there be, but I managed to download Heidenhain CNC3000 (Philips 432) manuals, thanks to THIS very forum
and several others for different machines from cncmanual.
Now here is my problem:
I have powered it up and everything started up correctly, all checks passed.
Then I pressed the button right to e-stop along with the 'clear' button.
As long as they were pressed, the pump worked, after releasing it stopped.
Tried several times.
Then I have chosen the X,Y,Z axes and touched the green button to home it.
It has homed, and displays 0,000, 0,000, 0,000 coordinates and the RP letters also.
And that's it.
Now there is a message: ERR I01 I01 displayed and I can do literally nothing.
I have read every single post on the forums and tried the magic combination from this place:
Deckel, Maho, Aciera, Abene Mills > Maho (Phillips432) graphics help please? - Page 2
(hydraulics > hydraulics AND clear > hydraulics AND clear HOLD)
Nothing happens, the screen does not change, the machine does not react.
From the online info I think it is the e-stop circuit because the limit switches has been reached.
There are several ways people approach this problem, by manually moving the axes, by switching homing directions
to get out of limit switches etc.
As I'm very new to the subject and know just next to nothing about these machines, I don't feel at home
with the idea of crushing the ballscrew by entering wrong direction.
I don't know how homing works, does it read the glass scale or just go and wait for the limit switch?
So the first question is what to do to solve this problem and the second is how it is even possible
that such a thing has appeared?
I don't get it, should I manually escape the switches every time I run the machine (no cranks here)?
Does anybody have operator's manual and wiring diagrams for this baby?