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    Heater turned on unexpectedly

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved
    Duet Hardware and wiring
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    • MortarArtundefined
      MortarArt
      last edited by

      Not more than 5 minutes ago, my idle printer's hot end fan turned on, and I went over to check why. I was at the time not connected to the network that it's on, and at first the duet display showed both thermistors at room temperature, so I put my finger close and confirmed that the heater block was in fact hot. After doing this and looking down, the temperature now read ~150c and climbing. So I logged on to the Duet web control, and saw it at about 230c, with Active set to 0, and Standby set to 240c. I set standby to 0, and it peaked at 245c, before falling.

      I don't know what happened, but this is very concerning to me.

      I often leave my printers on, ableit inactive, when unattended, and the prospect that one of them might suddenly set themselves to heat up is dangerous for obvious reasons. I'll cease doing that for now, but I'd like to know if this is a known behaviour.

      Firmware version; 2.02(RTOS) (2018-12-24b1)
      Firmware Electronics: Duet WiFi 1.02 or later
      WiFi Server Version: 1.22
      Web Interface Version: 1.22.6

      deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • deckingmanundefined
        deckingman @MortarArt
        last edited by deckingman

        @MortarArt As you say, that behaviour is concerning. No doubt someone more knowledgeable than I will post a reply but in the meantime, you might do what I do and that is put G10 Pn R0 S0 (where n is tool number) in config.g, and your slicer end gcode, and any cancel.g macros. That will ensure that the active and standby temperatures are always set to zero other than when printing. It doesn't resolve your issue but it should help to mitigate it.

        Ian
        https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
        https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

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        • MortarArtundefined
          MortarArt
          last edited by

          Good idea. It's possible there was some kind of power fault and the printer reset to that state. But normally standby is 0. The last job I did was in ABS, at 240c so that's where the standby temp came from.

          dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • jay_s_ukundefined
            jay_s_uk
            last edited by

            Also, think about updating the firmware to the last stable RR2 release

            Owns various duet boards and is the main wiki maintainer for the Teamgloomy LPC/STM32 port of RRF. Assume I'm running whatever the latest beta/stable build is

            MortarArtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • MortarArtundefined
              MortarArt @jay_s_uk
              last edited by

              @jay_s_uk yeah, I will do. But I'll wait until someone from Duet3D replies in case they want to run some tests to check things.

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              • dc42undefined
                dc42 administrators @MortarArt
                last edited by

                @MortarArt said in Heater turned on unexpectedly:

                Good idea. It's possible there was some kind of power fault and the printer reset to that state. But normally standby is 0. The last job I did was in ABS, at 240c so that's where the standby temp came from.

                Unfortunately most slicers don't understand firmware that supports active/standby temperatures, so they use M104 or M109 to set temperatures, which sets both. If the slicer doesn't reset them with M104 S0 at the end, it will leave the temperatures set.

                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

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                • MortarArtundefined
                  MortarArt
                  last edited by

                  Yes, but what I don't understand is why the printer decided to turn on the heat to the standby temperature. It was completely idle.

                  droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • droftartsundefined
                    droftarts administrators @MortarArt
                    last edited by

                    @MortarArt From your initial description, you have a PanelDue connected? Could something have pressed the screen, just in the right place to turn on the heater to standby? It's quite sensitive.

                    Ian

                    Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • MortarArtundefined
                      MortarArt
                      last edited by

                      Maybe an insect? The room was otherwise still enough for me to hear the fan turn on.

                      droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • droftartsundefined
                        droftarts administrators @MortarArt
                        last edited by

                        @MortarArt Maybe interference? It's a tough one to diagnose, and as far as I know, no one else has reported anything similar.

                        Ian

                        Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

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