Proven standard solution as an alternative to SIGSpro
NUMROTO is a complete solution for tool grinding that has been used on machines from different manufacturers for more than 25 years. By popular demand of the user, the 335linear is available with either SIGSpro or NUMROTO.
The core of NUMROTO is the NUMROTOplus programming system. With NUMROTOplus, a huge variety of tools can be produced and sharpened. Each detail of the individual tools can be changed and thus adapted to individual needs. NUMROTOplus is constantly being expanded with new workpiece geometries and features, making it a future-oriented investment.
Alternatively, is there a safe way to extract the Boot ROM from a working router via show version or show boot ?
Choose the option that fits your audience. Title: Need help locating a clean MCPX Boot ROM image (e.g., for Cisco 2800/3800 series)
Hey everyone,
Never underestimate the value of keeping old Boot ROM backups for EoL gear.
Last week, I faced this exact issue with a Cisco 2851. The fix wasn't a standard TFTP recovery. I had to rebuild the .
Thanks in advance. Title: Resurrecting a Cisco 2800: Flashing a Corrupted MCPX Boot ROM Image
I’m trying to recover a couple of older Cisco 2821 routers that appear to have corrupted Boot ROMs (stuck in ROMmon, rommon 1 > with no ability to load a valid IOS image).
After a 45-minute transfer over 9600 baud (yes, I need a faster console server), the router booted like a charm.
The programmed workpieces can be documented in the form of a workshop-specific drawing using the additional NUMROTO Draw function.
Alternatively, is there a safe way to extract the Boot ROM from a working router via show version or show boot ?
Choose the option that fits your audience. Title: Need help locating a clean MCPX Boot ROM image (e.g., for Cisco 2800/3800 series)
Hey everyone,
Never underestimate the value of keeping old Boot ROM backups for EoL gear.
Last week, I faced this exact issue with a Cisco 2851. The fix wasn't a standard TFTP recovery. I had to rebuild the . mcpx boot rom image
Thanks in advance. Title: Resurrecting a Cisco 2800: Flashing a Corrupted MCPX Boot ROM Image
I’m trying to recover a couple of older Cisco 2821 routers that appear to have corrupted Boot ROMs (stuck in ROMmon, rommon 1 > with no ability to load a valid IOS image). Alternatively, is there a safe way to extract
After a 45-minute transfer over 9600 baud (yes, I need a faster console server), the router booted like a charm.