/* motion_control.c - high level interface for issuing motion commands Part of Grbl Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud Copyright (c) 2011 Sungeun K. Jeon Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Grbl. If not, see . */ #include "Marlin.h" #include "stepper.h" #include "planner.h" // The arc is approximated by generating a huge number of tiny, linear segments. The length of each // segment is configured in settings.mm_per_arc_segment. void mc_arc(float *position, float *target, float *offset, uint8_t axis_0, uint8_t axis_1, uint8_t axis_linear, float feed_rate, float radius, uint8_t isclockwise, uint8_t extruder) { // int acceleration_manager_was_enabled = plan_is_acceleration_manager_enabled(); // plan_set_acceleration_manager_enabled(false); // disable acceleration management for the duration of the arc float center_axis0 = position[axis_0] + offset[axis_0]; float center_axis1 = position[axis_1] + offset[axis_1]; float linear_travel = target[axis_linear] - position[axis_linear]; float extruder_travel = target[E_AXIS] - position[E_AXIS]; float r_axis0 = -offset[axis_0]; // Radius vector from center to current location float r_axis1 = -offset[axis_1]; float rt_axis0 = target[axis_0] - center_axis0; float rt_axis1 = target[axis_1] - center_axis1; // CCW angle between position and target from circle center. Only one atan2() trig computation required. float angular_travel = atan2(r_axis0*rt_axis1-r_axis1*rt_axis0, r_axis0*rt_axis0+r_axis1*rt_axis1); if (angular_travel < 0) { angular_travel += 2*M_PI; } if (isclockwise) { angular_travel -= 2*M_PI; } //20141002:full circle for G03 did not work, e.g. G03 X80 Y80 I20 J0 F2000 is giving an Angle of zero so head is not moving //to compensate when start pos = target pos && angle is zero -> angle = 2Pi if (position[axis_0] == target[axis_0] && position[axis_1] == target[axis_1] && angular_travel == 0) { angular_travel += 2*M_PI; } //end fix G03 float millimeters_of_travel = hypot(angular_travel*radius, fabs(linear_travel)); if (millimeters_of_travel < 0.001) { return; } uint16_t segments = floor(millimeters_of_travel/MM_PER_ARC_SEGMENT); if(segments == 0) segments = 1; /* // Multiply inverse feed_rate to compensate for the fact that this movement is approximated // by a number of discrete segments. The inverse feed_rate should be correct for the sum of // all segments. if (invert_feed_rate) { feed_rate *= segments; } */ float theta_per_segment = angular_travel/segments; float linear_per_segment = linear_travel/segments; float extruder_per_segment = extruder_travel/segments; /* Vector rotation by transformation matrix: r is the original vector, r_T is the rotated vector, and phi is the angle of rotation. Based on the solution approach by Jens Geisler. r_T = [cos(phi) -sin(phi); sin(phi) cos(phi] * r ; For arc generation, the center of the circle is the axis of rotation and the radius vector is defined from the circle center to the initial position. Each line segment is formed by successive vector rotations. This requires only two cos() and sin() computations to form the rotation matrix for the duration of the entire arc. Error may accumulate from numerical round-off, since all double numbers are single precision on the Arduino. (True double precision will not have round off issues for CNC applications.) Single precision error can accumulate to be greater than tool precision in some cases. Therefore, arc path correction is implemented. Small angle approximation may be used to reduce computation overhead further. This approximation holds for everything, but very small circles and large mm_per_arc_segment values. In other words, theta_per_segment would need to be greater than 0.1 rad and N_ARC_CORRECTION would need to be large to cause an appreciable drift error. N_ARC_CORRECTION~=25 is more than small enough to correct for numerical drift error. N_ARC_CORRECTION may be on the order a hundred(s) before error becomes an issue for CNC machines with the single precision Arduino calculations. This approximation also allows mc_arc to immediately insert a line segment into the planner without the initial overhead of computing cos() or sin(). By the time the arc needs to be applied a correction, the planner should have caught up to the lag caused by the initial mc_arc overhead. This is important when there are successive arc motions. */ // Vector rotation matrix values float cos_T = 1-0.5*theta_per_segment*theta_per_segment; // Small angle approximation float sin_T = theta_per_segment; float arc_target[4]; float sin_Ti; float cos_Ti; float r_axisi; uint16_t i; int8_t count = 0; // Initialize the linear axis arc_target[axis_linear] = position[axis_linear]; // Initialize the extruder axis arc_target[E_AXIS] = position[E_AXIS]; for (i = 1; i