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Questions Regarding a 45° Fixed Probe

Hello!
Running PC-DMIS 2013 MR1 SP5 With a TP200 Tactile/Vision System
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So I've got this probe here; a 45° on a knuckle (I believe is the term)
It does not rotate, it's fixed at 45°.

Well... I recently had a crash and destroyed the TP200 module ($$$) which has been replaced. [If that's correct; the piece with the red light!]
This module is, as you can imagine, clocked slightly differently than the last one (I had to reload all of my probes into the probe changer manual/DCC or they would not seat correctly)
Which was easy.


Well now I've got this probe! It's swayed!

With the old module, the 45° probe was **** near (if not) perfectly in line with Y- (So it faces 45° between Z- and Y-)
With the new module, it's tilted 45° towards X- (So now it's 45° between Z- and Y-, AND 45° between Y- and X-!)

I'm curious on if that matters.

Ideally I'd just unscrew it a little, make the adjustment, lock it back in and calibrate.

I'd like to know how precisely I need to have it aligned, I guess? I think the fixed 45° won't change, because of the knuckle, I just need to change its X rotation.
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Will "eyeballing" (e.g. not using an indicator) to "level" the probe to Y- be fine? As in there will be negligable uncertainty from doing so, or should I call Hex-a-Tech?
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Hmm... All looks like word soup to me. Hopefully you guys understand what I'm looking for. Per my understanding (of star probes) it doesn't matter a whole lot (as long as it's not like crazy tilted), but I don't use this probe (literally ever except today, though I'd like to use it more) and I want to make sure my setup is correct.

We're due for calibration pretty soon, so someone'll be out here I can defer all my questions to, eventually
Hoping y'all have some advice
Parents
  • You can use the same probes if you position your part differently on each machine. But an L probe built in +X direction on one machine will not be in +X direction on the next, due to the TP200 module being threaded differently on each one, so it will shank out. They don't all screw in to the same position. So you either have to position the part differently on each machine to compensate or create individual probes.for each machine.
Reply
  • You can use the same probes if you position your part differently on each machine. But an L probe built in +X direction on one machine will not be in +X direction on the next, due to the TP200 module being threaded differently on each one, so it will shank out. They don't all screw in to the same position. So you either have to position the part differently on each machine to compensate or create individual probes.for each machine.
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