The E-Stop is connected, but I can disable that pin to see if it helps (now that I come to think about it, this stepper controller has been known to have some sort of internal clock/pulse signal that sometimes comes across the e-stop; I never had a problem on my old computer, but that's not to say it isn't an issue here). If it works I'll try to adjust the debounce with the input activated.
cncbasher wrote:just a wild guess , what breakout board do you have ?
and have you a good ground , and no earth loops etc , i know you dont have any limits etc , but thinking of either a bad earth , or a spike hitting the pc
what power supply are you using for the steppers , give me a bit more information on the electronics breakout / stepper drivers / power supply etc
The power supply and stepper drivers are an old (circa-80s/90s) proprietary board that came with the machine (Light Machines Corp LMC0200). It was originally set to run with proprietary software through a proprietary pci card; I have it running with LinuxCNC through a parallel port using a custom adapter cable to get the correct signals to the correct pins. Kind of thrown together, but it's worked using another computer for quite some time now.
I will try to run memtest86 tonight as well.
Thanks for the all the help so far guys.