He worked through the night. By 2 AM, with grease-stained fingers and a back that screamed, he had the bearing cleaned and repacked. By 4 AM, the lube system ran clear again. At 5:47 AM, he reset the breaker and powered up.
He pressed . The machine was ready.
First, he checked the tool. The carbide end mill was still sharp. Not that. fanuc 224 alarm
The bearing was dragging. The servo was pushing harder and harder to overcome the friction, and the encoder kept reporting, "Boss, I’m only at X=2.034, not 2.100 yet." After a few milliseconds of this argument, the Fanuc software pulled the plug. He worked through the night
The machine had been singing its high-frequency metal hymn just seconds ago, carving a turbine housing out of a block of Inconel. Now it sat frozen, a silent mechanical beast mid-bite. The spindle was locked in place, the coolant dripped in slow, sad plops, and the air in the small machine shop thickened with the smell of hot oil and dread. At 5:47 AM, he reset the breaker and powered up
Dave leaned against the control cabinet, exhausted, and watched the screen. The ghost of Alarm 224 was gone. But it had left its lesson behind, burned into the machine's memory and his own: In the dance between command and reality, friction is the silent killer.