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    What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?

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    • Danalundefined
      Danal @A Former User
      last edited by Danal

      @daxzero said in What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?:

      @bearer so which brand or model of 360 servo motor are recommend to used in duet 2 wifi board?

      The reason why nobody is answering that is: Almost any of them. All servos that take 1000 to 2000 ms pulses will work. Which is 99% of them.

      So choosing the servo has almost nothing to do with the Duet. You need to choose it based on torque, speed, positioning accuracy, rotating vs. positional, whatever you need. The Duet will drive it.

      Oh, and I strongly agree with @bearer, a stepper motor is a MUCH better choice to drive a rotary tool changer table, as vs. a servo. As he said, accel, speed, decell will be important to moving that much mass, and a Duet driven stepper does that as a base function. Servos don't.

      Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

      A Former User? 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • A Former User?
        A Former User @Danal
        last edited by

        @Danal Ok. Can i used gcode to control stepper motor for rotary tool changer table?

        A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • A Former User?
          A Former User @A Former User
          last edited by

          @daxzero said in What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?:

          Can i used gcode to control stepper motor for rotary tool changer table?

          just set up the steps/mm as steps/degree and use it like any other stepper

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • A Former User?
            A Former User
            last edited by

            you mean yes and able to do that on slicer, right?

            dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • A Former User?
              A Former User @Danal
              last edited by

              @Danal i just want to know more about servo motor and what happen if i do it.

              the red circle highlighted is also used to servo motor right?
              if yes, then can i used gcode to control it?

              2050601e-470a-4c1e-8624-f9eff0bbabf1-image.png

              infiniteloopundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Danalundefined
                Danal
                last edited by

                https://duet3d.dozuki.com/Wiki/Gcode#Section_M280_Set_servo_position

                Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                • infiniteloopundefined
                  infiniteloop @A Former User
                  last edited by

                  @daxzero

                  i just want to know more about servo motor and what happen if i do it.

                  Looks like you are mixing things up. You want to perform a task, right? As far as I’ve understood, you want to build a tool changer, i.e. a mechanism which puts the requested tool at a certain position - either by rotary or linear motion - so that it can be picked up.

                  So that’s the goal. But, instead of asking how to achieve this, you focus on servos. Sure, you can use a servo to control the required motion, but your posts tell me that you are missing the point: instead of getting the task done, you follow a certain idea of how servos might work.

                  Well, with a Duet, (almost) anything goes. Even with servos. But first, have a look at your wallet: how much do you want to spend? RC-Servos can be cheap, all others are pretty costly. The cheaper ones are not very precise, the better ones are difficult to control. Lots of additional hardware, lots of Gcodes, lots of money. What for?

                  The simple answer is: use a stepper instead. It’s as well cheap as it is precise, it just does the job. When you are done with the tool changer, feel free to buy a cheap RC-servo and play with it. That’s exactly how I learnt about servos and how I can use them to improve my printer.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dc42undefined
                    dc42 administrators @A Former User
                    last edited by

                    @daxzero said in What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?:

                    you mean yes and able to do that on slicer, right?

                    I suggest you control the stepper motor for the tool or filament change in the tool change files, not the slicer

                    Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                    Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                    http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                    Danalundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Danalundefined
                      Danal @dc42
                      last edited by

                      @infiniteloop said in What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?:

                      The simple answer is: use a stepper instead. It’s as well cheap as it is precise, it just does the job. When you are done with the tool changer, feel free to buy a cheap RC-servo and play with it. That’s exactly how I learnt about servos and how I can use them to improve my printer.

                      @dc42 said in What kind of servo motor are recommend connect to duet 2 wifi?:

                      I suggest you control the stepper motor for the tool or filament change in the tool change files, not the slicer

                      Two very good answers. Both of these cannot be overstressed.

                      Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • tekstyleundefined
                        tekstyle
                        last edited by tekstyle

                        If you use a stepper motor to do the lock and unlocking, does it mean it will take up a stepper driver port? I have a duet2 +duex5. Can I use a pwn fan output to drive it?

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                        • Danalundefined
                          Danal
                          last edited by

                          A stepper needs a stepper driver port. It will not run on PWM.

                          Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Danalundefined
                            Danal
                            last edited by

                            A D2 + Duex5 can be configured to support:

                            X, Y, ZZZ (three motor leveling for bed), U (tool lock) and 4 extruders on tools. At that point, it is out of drivers.

                            See https://github.com/machineagency/jubilee for details, including running D2/Duex5 config.g and toolchange (tpre, tpost, tfree) files.

                            Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                            • Rievundefined
                              Riev @A Former User
                              last edited by

                              @daxzero

                              You can try this Geneva Indexing Table Mechanism.
                              Just use a stepper motor.

                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tchOhvDgQM
                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPA9_cqAC-w

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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