--- In mach1mach2cnc@..., "Chuck Meckem" <zoomer@n...>
wrote:
I have been setting up my screen for my father who has little
experince with CNC.
Trying to train him as my cnc operator only right now.
For this purpose I think less info the better.
I would like to see diag screen and other non job related screens
become menu items rather than buttons and or pages.
His mill does not have spindel on off or rpm checking, nor limit
switches. So I left those items out of my design I recently
uploaded. Some day we will hook that stuff up,And I can add that
stuff back in.
His mill is a simple desktop 4th axis machine with no bells and
whistles.
While simplicity is a virtue you will find that even complex screens
are pretty easy to get used to. Kind of like an instrument panel on
a modern aircraft. Your eye and experience will allow you to rapidly
focus on the control you need on a crowded panel. If you logically
group and place the controls it makes it even faster. I got used to
MACH1 with everything on the main screen and Art came out with the
mutiple screen MACH2....I HATED it for a while. I ran from the
diagnostics screen for a long time until I could find time to design
my own. I ended up building a screen that had 100% of everything I
use and I never switch around. Some controls I very seldom use but
my brain (the part that allows me to hear the TV audio while my wife
is talking loudly to her sister in the same room) lets me filter them
out and focus on the controls I need.
After a basic training period with a simple screen you might want to
try a more complex version. Ignore the howls of protest for a few
days and see if the operator gets acclimated to the new interface.