If I understand correctly, the following error is calculated basically along the circumference of the circle of rotation.
The chord error (basically the distance between two points which don't neccessarily lie on the circumference, is this correct? (I'm assuming the center of your circle is 0,0).
Draw a diagram of what you're actually measuring and it'll be clear why the two lengths don't have to correlate.
In case you don't have time to do this, here's an approximation (in your excel file).
If your chord error is large, this means your circle center os offset or your XY trajectory is simply not a circle. Otherwise this returns more or less your measurement accuracy.
Your following error is the difference between the IS position and the SHOULD position ALONG the axis of travel. If you have a perfect circle, and the center is 0,0 then basically your chord error should ALWAYS be 0, even if the following error is huge.
Hope this helps
Shane.
EDIT: After looking at the word file, I can say the following. The chord error is basically telling you how circular the actual motion path is (of how offset the center is) whereas the following error is telling you how well the motor is tracking the position you're telling it to take.
The two values are almost completely independent of each other. There is no reason to assume a correlation.
Message Edited by shoneill on 04-07-2006 10:20 AM
Using LV 6.1 and 8.2.1 on W2k (SP4) and WXP (SP2)