Legacy CNC to MES Migration: RS232 Ethernet Integration | Valtoris

Bridging the 30-Year Gap:
Connect Legacy RS232 CNCs to Modern MES

Digitize 90s-era machines (Fanuc, Haas, Mazak) without exorbitant OEM motherboard upgrades. Overcome 15-meter cable limits, map Virtual COM ports, and safely execute massive G-code files using Hardware Flow Control (RTS/CTS).

Consult an Integration Expert ↓
Supports Fanuc, Haas, Mazak
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Hardware RTS/CTS Flow Control
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Compatible with:
Cimco DNC
Predator
Mastercam

The Three Nightmares of Legacy CNC Networking

The 15-Meter Dead End

RS232 protocols natively fail past 15 meters. Running hundreds of feet of serial cable across a noisy factory floor guarantees data corruption, parity errors, and messy wiring that violates modern IT compliance standards.

The COM-Port Hostage Crisis

Most plants still use older DNC software that flat out refuses to recognize modern IP addresses. They need actual COM1 or COM2 ports. Regular Ethernet converters won’t work unless you have special driver software.

Drip-Feeding Buffer Crashes

Older CNCs have extremely limited memory (often just 256KB). When your DNC pushes a 20MB 3D machining program, the machine must process it sequentially. Without strict Hardware Flow Control, the buffer overflows, causing immediate tool collisions.

Reference Architecture: CNC Island Connectivity

Click the components to see how we bypass distance limits and secure Drip-feed transmissions.

▷ SECURE LEGACY MACHINE DIGITIZATION
MES / DNC Server
Running VirCom Virtual COM
Valtoris Edge Gateway
Wired / WiFi / 4G
Legacy CNC #1
Fanuc / Haas (RS232)
Legacy CNC #2
Null Modem Interlocked

Node Info

    Reference Architecture BOM

    * A scalable architecture. Whether you have an isolated machine requiring WiFi, or a high-density “Machining Island” requiring 8 clustered ports, Valtoris provides the exact physical layer translation.

    Architectural LayerComponent Description & FunctionRecommended Hardware
    1. Virtual InterfaceCreates a virtual COM3 or COM4 on the Windows MES/DNC server, transparently routing legacy serial software requests over the factory TCP/IP LAN. VirCom Device Management
    (Included with all Gateways)
    2. Single Node (Wired)For stand alone machines. Converts RS232 signals to standard Ethernet over RJ45. Leverages existing Cat5/Cat6 drops in the factory for maximum stability. 1CH-RS232-ETH Gateway →
    3. Single Node (Wireless)For shop floors where pulling Ethernet cable is cost-prohibitive. Bridges the RS232 data directly onto the factory’s existing 2.4GHz WiFi network. VT-WF100 WiFi Gateway →
    4. High-Density Machining IslandConsolidates 4 to 8 machines back-to-back into a single IP drop. Uses RJ45-to-DB9 adapter cables to cleanly route RS232 connections locally within the cell. 8CH-RS232-ETH Gateway →
    5. Flow-Control CablingMust utilize a full-handshake Null Modem cable (crossing Tx/Rx and RTS/CTS pins) to physically prevent buffer overflow during Drip-feeding.Null Modem DB9 Cable

    Engineer’s Guide: Parameters & Flow Control

    Understanding the difference between a 3-wire cable and a full-handshake configuration is the difference between a successful integration and a scrapped workpiece.

    The Required DB9 Pinout (RTS/CTS)

    Valtoris Gateway CNC Controller
    Pin 2 (RXD) Pin 3 (TXD)
    Pin 3 (TXD) Pin 2 (RXD)
    Pin 5 (GND) Pin 5 (GND)
    Pin 7 (RTS) Pin 8 (CTS)
    Pin 8 (CTS) Pin 7 (RTS)

    * If utilizing the Valtoris RJ45-to-DB9 adapter, Pins 4, 6, 7, and 8 are fully mapped natively to support XON/XOFF and RTS/CTS.

    Legacy Parameter Cheat Sheet

    Legacy controllers rarely use the modern 9600-8-N-1 standard. Ensure your Valtoris Gateway is configured to match these typical OEM defaults:

    Fanuc / Yasnac (Typical)

    Baud: 4800 or 9600

    Data Bits: 7 | Parity: Even

    Stop Bits: 2 (7-E-2)

    Haas / Fadal (Typical)

    Baud: 9600 or 19200

    Data Bits: 7 or 8 | Parity: Even or None

    Stop Bits: 1 (7-E-1 or 8-N-1)

    CapEx Mitigation Template

    Copy this pre-written engineering justification to explain to stakeholders why utilizing serial-to-ethernet edge gateways is vastly superior to undertaking expensive CNC controller motherboard upgrades.

    Deep Dive: Search Queries Answered

    How do I connect a legacy serial machine to modern MES integration software?
    Modern MES and DNC systems are on TCP/IP networks while legacy machines use RS232. To solve this, install a Serial-to-Ethernet Device Server on the machine. This device packages the serial data into TCP/UDP packets so the machine can communicate directly over your factory’s local area network (LAN) with no physical distance limitations.
    My DNC software (Cimco) only allows me to select COM ports, not IP addresses. What do I do?
    This is a common issue with legacy software. The solution is to install Virtual Serial & Device Management (VirCom) software on your DNC server. This software creates a virtual port (e.g., COM4) in the Windows Device Manager. You point your DNC software (like Cimco or Predator) to COM4, and VirCom transparently intercepts the serial traffic and routes it to the IP address of the Valtoris gateway out on the shop floor.
    How do we connect 8 CNC machines grouped together without running 8 separate Ethernet drops?
    For high-density machining islands, use a multi-port gateway like the 8CH-RS232-ETH. This acts as a localized hub. You run short RJ45-to-DB9 serial cables from the hub to the 8 surrounding machines, and only require a single Ethernet cable back to your IT switch. All 8 serial ports can use the same IP address, uniquely identified by distinct TCP port numbers.
    Can I network my CNC machines without running any Ethernet cables at all?
    Yes. For shop floors where pulling Ethernet cable is cost-prohibitive or where machines are frequently repositioned, you can utilize the VT-WF100 WiFi Serial Device Server. It connects to the CNC’s RS232 port and bridges the data directly onto your factory’s existing 2.4GHz 802.11b/g WiFi network.