Wild TA-10 Innards

From Technologia Incognita
Revision as of 15:18, 29 October 2013 by Justa (talk | contribs) (Cutting-head base-unit)
Jump to: navigation, search

Wild TA-10; Innards.

Overview of units

To simplify documentation, it's often handy to separate things in terms of functionality as much as possible and document these accordingly. In an effort to make a handy/useful overview; an effort to identify seperate functions is proposed here.

Units/functions

Mechanical

Base unit

Table unit

Arm unit

Cutting Head

Piston/hinge unit

Nobody's really taken this apart yet, and we've got good reason to assume that this is a non-trivial thing to even attempt. More to the point, we've received warnings about leaving the spring-assembly intact as re-assembly could be problematic.

It should be noted that the Piston does not seem to have any wires routed through it and is a purely mechanical construction.

Electronics

Power Supply

Control Unit

CPU board

I/O board

Servo amplifiers

Table unit

Wire-routing

Lighting system

Cutting-head unit

Cutting-head base-unit

The Y-arm has an actuator that moves along it in vertical direction. We shall refer to this as the 'base' unit.

This base-unit has mounting-holes for an 'cutting head option-unit' that attaches to it and is driven by signals carried over a female DB9. Among the signals available are a permanent voltage, 'light' voltage, two 'pen down' signals.

Wild TA10-head1.jpg

The base-unit has a number of switches and connectors on the top. 'Quality' is currently of unknown usefulness. 'Lighting' turns on the light-signal on the aforementioned DB9 (and is meant to provide light onto the work-surface, underneath the cutting-head option-unit). The complex-looking connector (2x7-pins) is employed to hook up the tangential cutting-attachment; most likely functioning as a stepper-motor with positional feedback for absolute-angle driving.

There is a small white connector available, seemingly shielded and possibly used for some kind of sensing application. Current use unknown.

The PCB (PCB-H1) close to the switches is responsible for hooking them up, as well as driving/reading the signals on the DB9 connector. The place that the HF-signal is hooked up to is not quite clear. The PCB has two identifiable IC's on it; a 7404 hex-invertor and an LM339 quad voltage-comperators. The PCB carries the designator '339 170d'

A wide rainbow-ribbon cable runs to a PCB on the right side (PCB-H2); mounted next to a servo-motor that's also hooked up to this PCB. A total of 6 wires run to the servo's backside, containing a small PCB (PCB-H3) with two trim-pots on it.

The PCB-H2 also has a connector for the incoming signals from the control-unit, as well as power for all of the functions of the cutting-head. This cable-tree is ensheathed in a grey protective mesh.

PCB-H2 also contains a number of IC's. Sadly, photographic documentation has too little detail to make out part-numbers.

Cutting-head option-unit