Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine
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@nightowl999
I changed a couple of things in the M911 line
M911 S23 R23.5 P"M913 X0 Y0 G91""M98 P""SaveSpindleSpeed.g"
There's something wrong: the double quotation marks following G91 should not be there (and you can skip G91 completely), then, a second quotation mark to end the M98 argument is missing, finally, the closing quotation mark of M911 is missing, too. So try this instead:
M911 S23 R 23.5 P"M913 X0 Y0 M98 P""SaveSpindleSpeed.g"""
Let's try and see if the M292 and M916 errors persist.
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@infiniteloo
Ooh, that's a lot of quotation marks...
I'll let you know how it goes...
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That change truncated the writing of the RestoreSpindleSpeed. g
This is all I got...
; RestoreSpindleSpeed.g ; Spindle speed saved from running "0:/gcodes/Calibration Toolpath.gcode" CNC file ; set up the global variable abort_process so we can abort further execution of resurrect.g: if {!exists(global.abort_process)} global abort_process = true else set global.abort_process = true
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@infiniteloop
I deleted the RestoreSpindleSpeed.g to see how much SaveSpindleSpeed.g would write, but there was nothing. Running the SaveSpindleSpeed.g file from the MDI produced the file, but obviously it didn't have any proer values -
@nightowl999 said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
That change truncated the writing of the RestoreSpindleSpeed. g
That's what I expected. Due to the misplaced quotation marks,
M911
didn't execute properly - I think that even resurrect.g has been malformed by that: this would explain the "No P parameter…" errors.Sigh. One measure of last resort is to trim the execution time of SaveSpindleSpeed.g - with luck, we gain some nanoseconds. So make a copy of your actual SaveSpindleSpee.g file and put this into the macro, instead:
var fName = "RestoreSpindleSpeed.g" echo >>{var.fName} "if {!exists(global.abort_process)}" echo >>{var.fName} " global abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "else" echo >>{var.fName} " set global.abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "M291 S3 R""Resurrect:"" P""Continue with <"^{job.file.fileName}^">?""" echo >>{var.fName} "set global.abort_process = false" echo >>{var.fName} "M3 S"^{spindles[0].active}
With luck, this will work, depending on the current load on the Duet. But I have to insist: that's not good practice, it's more like a ride on a razor blade.
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@infiniteloop
Sorry, about this, but I tried something while you were cogitating...I edited the M911 file to this:
M911 S23 R 23.5 P"M913 X0 Y0 M98 P"SaveSpindleSpeed.g"
...and it worked, apart from the spindle errors. The SavedSpindleSpeed was fully formed, too.
I don't think it's a timing thing afterall. The "processing" stays onscreen in the DWC for a few seconds, perhaps 2 or 3?
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This is the file:
; RestoreSpindleSpeed.g ; Spindle speed saved from running "null" CNC file ; set up the global variable abort_process so we can abort further execution of resurrect.g: if {!exists(global.abort_process)} global abort_process = true else set global.abort_process = true ; now comes the dialog: M291 S3 R"Resurrect:" P"Continue with <null>?" ; we will only arrive here if the dialog was closed with OK: set global.abort_process = false M3 S0 ;EOF
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@nightowl999 said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
I deleted the RestoreSpindleSpeed.g to see how much SaveSpindleSpeed.g would write, but there was nothing.
That's why I decidedly put the macro call at the beginning of the
M911
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@infiniteloop
OK, I'll change them back... -
@nightowl999 said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
This is the file:
We are out of sync. delete that and look at the file resulting from the next power outage.
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@infiniteloop
File deleted. I'm just changing the M911 line back...And now I'm going to try again...
And RestoreSpindleSpeed .g only got to line 6...
This is the M911 line in config.g...
M911 S23 R23.5 P"M98 P""SaveSpindleSpeed.g"" M913 X0 Y0" ; set voltage thresholds and actions to run on power loss
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@nightowl999 said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
And RestoreSpindleSpeed .g only got to line 6
At that point, remaining power has gone.
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@Nightowl999 Obviously, SaveSpindleSpeed.g has not enough time to finish its job before power is totally lost. You have two options:
- take measures to keep power up a bit longer
- forego the dialog, so that RestoreSpindleSpeed.g becomes a one-liner
The second option requires changes to SaveSpindleSpeed.g and resurrect-prologue.g. If you want to go this route, I will provide the sources.
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I'm still hoping someone will answer my question about using a small powerbank permanently plugged in to the USB port on the Duet3, but nothing yet. If that isn't an option, there may be an alternative!
I can REM out the unnecessary lines in SaveSpindleSpeed.g and resurrect-prologue.g quite easily, and see if that makes a difference. I'll do that this evening, but won't be able to test them until tomorrow, though.
Thanks for your perseverence!
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@nightowl999 said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
I can REM out the unnecessary lines in SaveSpindleSpeed.g and resurrect-prologue.g quite easily, and see if that makes a difference
It does. I am pretty sure that SaveSpindleSpeed.g has enough time to write a one-liner to the SD card. By now, it gets 4-6 lines done.
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OK, so I've done that, leaving the SaveSpindleSpeed.g at this:
var fName = "RestoreSpindleSpeed.g" echo >>{var.fName} "if {!exists(global.abort_process)}" echo >>{var.fName} " global abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "else" echo >>{var.fName} " set global.abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "M291 S3 R""Resurrect:"" P""Continue with <"^{job.file.fileName}^">?""" echo >>{var.fName} "set global.abort_process = false" echo >>{var.fName} "M3 S"^{spindles[0].active}
Which produces this RestoreSpindleSpeed.g file:
if {!exists(global.abort_process)} global abort_process = true else set global.abort_process = true M291 S3 R"Resurrect:" P"Continue with <null>?" set global.abort_process = false M3 S0
What I was surprised to see is that if I don't delete the RestoreSpindleSpeed.g and run the SaveSpindleSpeed.g again, it appends to the existing file - perpetually.
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@infiniteloop
Actually, why do I need to edit the resurrect-prologue.g file, as this is only run when power is restored? -
@nightowl999
What I was surprised to see is that if I don't delete the RestoreSpindleSpeed.g and run the SaveSpindleSpeed.g again, it appends to the existing file - perpetually.
The first echo must be written with a single angular bracket, i.e. „echo >{var.fName} …
OK, so I've done that, leaving the SaveSpindleSpeed.g at this:
Hm, that’s the file I posted today at 19:14, and I know which RestoreSpindleSpeed.g it generates. That’s not the one-liner I had in mind. Don't mix things up, please.
Actually, why do I need to edit the resurrect-prologue.g file, as this is only run when power is restored?
Because if RestoreSpindleSpeed.g becomes a one-liner, the current resurrect-prologue.g throws an error on the missing variable abort_process.
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@infiniteloop said in Power failure and resurrection on a CNC machine:
Hm, that’s the file I posted today at 19:14, and I know which RestoreSpindleSpeed.g it generates. That’s not the one-liner I had in mind. Don't mix things up, please.
I wasn't saying it isn't, just that is what I was left with once I'd deleted the REM lines, but which one-liner were you referring to, to replace those 8 lines, please?
The first echo must be written with a single angular bracket, i.e. „echo >{var.fName} …
Ah, I deleted the lines above it, leaving this one with two >>. Should it be like this, then?
var fName = "RestoreSpindleSpeed.g" echo >{var.fName} "if {!exists(global.abort_process)}" echo >>{var.fName} " global abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "else" echo >>{var.fName} " set global.abort_process = true" echo >>{var.fName} "M291 S3 R""Resurrect:"" P""Continue with <"^{job.file.fileName}^">?""" echo >>{var.fName} "set global.abort_process = false" echo >>{var.fName} "M3 S"^{spindles[0].active}
Because if RestoreSpindleSpeed.g becomes a one-liner
OK, but I'm still unsure how that file could possibly become a one-liner, to be honest!
Also, can I just check I've got the config.g M911 line correct, please:
M911 S23 R23.5 P"M98 P""SaveSpindleSpeed.g""M913 X0 Y0"
Thank you
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FYI, the spurious {1} lines are a bug in the forum markup software.
You can alleviate them by specifying a language after the code ticks```php ```json ```perl
Just try different ones till it clears the extra lines
Edit: some references
https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/working-with-advanced-formatting/creating-and-highlighting-code-blocks