HEIDENHAIN TNC 370 User Manual page 38

Conversational programming
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1
Introduction
1.2
Fundamentals
of NC
.-
Reference
system
L
L
In order to define positions
one needs a reference
system.
For example,
positions
on the earth's surface can be defined
"absolutely"
by their
geographic
coordinates
of longitude
and latitude.
The term "coordinate"
comes from the Latin word for "that which
is arranged,"
i.e. dimensions
used for determining
or defining
positions.
The network
of horizontal
and
vertical lines around the globe constitute
an "absolute
reference
system"
-in
contrast
to the "relative" definition
of a position
that is referenced,
for example,
to some other, known
location.
L
Cartesian
coordinate
system
A workpiece
is normally machined
on a TNC 370 controlled
milling
machine
according
to a workpiece-reference
Cartesian
coordinate
system (a rectangular
coordinate
system named
after the French
mathematician
and philosopher
Fiene Descartes,
Latin: Renatus
Cartesi-
us; 1596 to 1650). The Cartesian
coordinate
system
is based on three
coordinate
axes X, Y and Z, which
are parallel
to the machine
guide-
ways. The figure to the right illustrates
the "right hand rule" for remem-
bering the three axis directions:
the middle finger is pointing
in the
positive direction
of the tool axis from the workpiece
toward
the tool (the
Z axis), the thumb
is pointing
in the positive X direction,
and the index
finger in the positive Y direction.
Fig. 1.9:
The geographic coordinate system
is an absolute reference system
Fig. 1 .I 0:
Designations and directions of the
axes on a milling machine
TNC 370
1-19

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