


zip a small dos utility to test and read back your parallel port pins which is invaluable in troubleshooting. If possible, you might consider re-routing your actual printer port, and using a more standard (older) parallel port hex address for the stepper board.Īnother thing you can do is download TurboCNC, which is a DOS program - it has many setup options (like changing pin bits from active low to active high, etc.) You could use this to test what works with your board and port, and than transfer that knowledge to the Jedicut setup.

Create detailed rack and data center diagrams using this set of 2,000 shapes representing network equipment from 3Com, APC, Cisco, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Nortel, Panduit, and Sun Microsystems. However there can be other interface issues - for instance, are your board's pins active high or active low?Īnother question I have is why LPT3? Where are LPT1 and 2? A set of 24 Microsoft Visio stencils containing manufacturer-specific network equipment shapes for rack and data center diagrams. So it sems if you have made up a cable that mimics the functions you are half way there. Now, to answer a couple of points, I use a non-M001 board (Hobb圜NC) with the M001 driver, and it works fine. Only problem is on my Windows 10 it disappears every time I turn computer off, at my location I do. Best when asking others to troubleshoot to start a new thread with full details, particularly since your problem may be different. UC100 works well when you can get driver to stays installed. Rob, sorry for the address confusion, but you did say you had the "same problem" as the OP, and didn't indicate a different error message or address.
