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    Standby temperature definition in dual extruder

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    • Perttiundefined
      Pertti
      last edited by

      Temperatures2.JPG
      I changed slicer start and end codes. Heater fault occured two times.
      It´s getting wild.

      Pertti
      “A winner is just a loser who tried one more time.”
      George M. Moore, Jr.

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

        @Pertti Those sudden temperature excursions for heater 2 look like a faulty thermistor or wiring. The actual temperature can't possibly change that fast.

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

        1riundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • Perttiundefined
          Pertti
          last edited by

          Yes wiring was the reason. I changed hotends ant thermistors. Still I can´t control the standby temperature.

          Pertti
          “A winner is just a loser who tried one more time.”
          George M. Moore, Jr.

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

            @Pertti said in Standby temperature definition in dual extruder:

            .............. Still I can´t control the standby temperature.

            Glad you sorted the wiring issue. What are you doing now to set standby temperatures? Are you using G10 S and R?

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

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Perttiundefined
              Pertti
              last edited by

              Hi and thank´s for help.
              Here´s my printer settings in Cura:

              G28 ;Home
              G1 Z15.0 F6000 ;Move the platform down 15mm
              ;Prime the extruder

              Start Gcode:
              G10 P0 R140 S205
              G10 P1 R140 S205
              G92 E0
              G1 F200 E3
              G92 E0

              End gcode:
              M104 S0
              M140 S0
              ;Retract the filament
              G10 P0 S0 R140
              G10 P1 S0 R140
              G92 E1
              G1 E-1 F300
              G28 X0 Y0
              M84

              Pertti
              “A winner is just a loser who tried one more time.”
              George M. Moore, Jr.

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

                @Pertti OK, that looks like it should work - it's more or less what I uses except that I have 6 extruders and 9 tools, not just 2.

                Now what commands does Cura put in the gcode file when you change from one tool to another? What we want to happen is that there is simply a T0 or T1 and nothing else. We don't want to see any M104 or M109 commands. I'm not familiar with Cura so I can't advise on what you need to do to handle tool changes.

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

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                • Danalundefined
                  Danal
                  last edited by Danal

                  I've been checking, and I don't see Cura generating anything extra. No 104/109.

                  Edit: I just checked again, and Cura definately DOES insert M104s and 109s throughout. In my prior looks, everything was set to the same temps, so it didn't have to change anything. If temps are different, it does insert the commands.

                  Here is a typical sequence. Comments are mine.

                  G1 X155.94 Y152.636 E0.00106
                  G1 X155.942 Y152.58 E0.0014
                  G0 F5400 X156.175 Y152.748
                  G1 F1200 E-16
                  G1 F600 Z1.45
                  T0                             ; Mount T0
                  M109 S200                      ; Set T0 to 200, and wait for that temp. 
                  M104 T1 S175                   ; Set old tool to 175
                  G1 F1200 E9.5
                  G1 F600 Z0.45
                  ;MESH:twoColor1_2_7_10_53.stl
                  G0 F5400 X152.093 Y128.068
                  M104 S210                      ; Set current tool, T0, to 210.  Do not wait. 
                  ;TYPE:WALL-INNER
                  G1 F1500 E6.5
                  G1 F3300 X152.289 Y128.172 E0.00553
                  G1 X152.276 Y128.217 E0.00117
                  G1 X152.267 Y128.246 E0.00076
                  

                  Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

                  deckingmanundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • deckingmanundefined
                    deckingman @Danal
                    last edited by

                    @Danal said in Standby temperature definition in dual extruder:

                    ........... I'm curious why we don't want to see 104/109. I

                    Oh, because we are just trying to use G10 to set the active and standby temperatures for dual extruders, rather than the slicer. So to prevent any "interference", it'll be better if the slicer simply puts T"n" commands in the gcode file, and the firmware will take care of setting the tool temperatures and switching them between active and standby. The OP was struggling to get Cura to set the standby temperatures, hence the alternative G10 approach but that's not to say that it couldn't be done in Cura - not familiar with it so we don't know how.

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

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

                      Yeah, there is a "no right answer" to speeding up toolchange by pre-heating tools. Who should place the "raise yourself from standby" in advance of the actual mount. Slicer? Firmware via "look ahead"? Not sure. Today, the firmware does not do it. (to my knowledge).

                      I am aware that Cura does it, and of some scripts that can do it for any slicer. I don't have a real strong feeling as to which "should" do it, other than the look-ahead could be quite a large number of lines... and that could eventually get weird in the firmware.

                      Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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

                        @Danal Can that temperature sequence that Cura uses be changed? It looks like the "old" tool is held at print temperature while the new tool is heating up (M109) and only after the new tool has reached active temperature, is the old tool set to standby temperature. It would be better if the M104 "set (standby) temperature but don't wait" came before the M109 "set (active) temperature and wait" command.

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

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

                          @Danal said in Standby temperature definition in dual extruder:

                          Yeah, there is a "no right answer" to speeding up toolchange by pre-heating tools. Who should place the "raise yourself from standby" in advance of the actual mount. Slicer? Firmware via "look ahead"? Not sure. Today, the firmware does not do it. (to my knowledge). ............

                          AFAIK too, there is no look ahead feature in the firmware but I think it's on DC42s list of things to look into.

                          I do know that David thinks it's about time slicers caught up and started using G10 to set active and standby temperatures but (to the best of my knowledge), none of them do. Using G10 is much simpler because you simply set the desired active and standby temperatures for each of the tools at the start of a print, then all you have to do is switch between tools with Tn commands - no need to use M104 and 109s to set different temperatures for each tool every time you change between them.

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

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

                            Yeah, I thought that was odd as well. Let me look and see how much control we have. Ultimately... it is open source!

                            Also, if we don't want Cura to do this at all, just set standby = printing.

                            
                            

                            Also, just to be clear, Cura has no concept of 'standby' as Duet understands it, meaning two temperatures for the same tool. Cura simply sets 'the' temperature at the appropriate points in time, to either 'printing temperature' or 'standby temperature', these being specified in the GUI... but the difference between the two is when they get set, in terms of 'just mounted' vs. 'just parked' a tool. Don't know that this makes any real difference. Just a fact about how it works.

                            In fact, I just realized Cura is not 'pre' heating... it is doing it all at mount time. Therefore, I believe at this time, I know of only one script that 'pre' heats.

                            Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                            • Danalundefined
                              Danal @deckingman
                              last edited by

                              @deckingman said in Standby temperature definition in dual extruder:

                              Using G10 is much simpler because you simply set the desired active and standby temperatures for each of the tools at the start of a print, then all you have to do is switch between tools with Tn commands - no need to use M104 and 109s to set different temperatures for each tool every time you change between them.

                              Exactly.

                              Today, Cura doesn't seem to know about this. We could "override" by putting G10s in the start gcode, and setting Cura printing = Cura standby.

                              Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                              • botundefined
                                bot @deckingman
                                last edited by

                                @deckingman Cura might be trying to pull off some timing tricks with the temperature of the extruder.

                                I'm experimenting with this type of feature in IceSL, it's quite neat. It will set the standby temp of the parked extruder to a value that will allow just the right amount of time for it to warm back up in time. Sometimes, that's not far from active temp. But if the tool is only parked for 20 seconds, that makes sense.

                                I haven't tested it in real prints yet, I'm just figuring it out and implementing it into the printer profile right now, but it's configurable via the slicer GUI with a rate of heating/cooling.

                                *not actually a robot

                                Danalundefined deckingmanundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Danalundefined
                                  Danal @bot
                                  last edited by

                                  @bot said in Standby temperature definition in dual extruder:

                                  @deckingman Cura might be trying to pull off some timing tricks with the temperature of the extruder.

                                  I'm experimenting with this type of feature in IceSL, it's quite neat. It will set the standby temp of the parked extruder to a value that will allow just the right amount of time for it to warm back up in time. Sometimes, that's not far from active temp. But if the tool is only parked for 20 seconds, that makes sense.

                                  Nice!!

                                  Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                                  • deckingmanundefined
                                    deckingman @bot
                                    last edited by

                                    @bot That looks like a significant step in the right direction. Ultimately we need a look ahead function but it's awkward because it would need to be done on a time basis. i.e. we need to start heating a tool from standby to active nnn minutes before we need to use it. How does one work out nn minutes back from a Tn command in gcode file? Is that how IceSL does it? - If so, that's a very clever trick!

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

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

                                      Looks like SlicerPE also has the capability to do this. Very clear how you turn it off/on, it is called "ooze prevention".

                                      81061c3d-bea8-4457-aaa1-bb2710ed0811-image.png

                                      Typical G-Code snip. In this case, the comments were already there.

                                      G1 E-4.96836 F2400.00000
                                      ; Filament-specific end gcode
                                      G1 X128.341 Y161.138 F7800.000
                                      M104 S235 T1 ; set temperature
                                      
                                      ; perform tool change wipe retract
                                      G91
                                      G1 X2.5 Y2.5 E-0.25
                                      ; complete remainder of retraction at defined speed
                                      G1 F2400 E-4.75
                                      ; return to absolute coordinates and perimeter printing speed
                                      G90
                                      G1 F3600
                                      M106 S255
                                      T0
                                      M900 K30 ; Filament gcode
                                      M109 S210 T0 ; set temperature and wait for it to be reached
                                      G1 X147.977 Y147.194 F7800.000
                                      G1 E10.00000 F2400.00000
                                      G1 F1800.000
                                      

                                      Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

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                                      • botundefined
                                        bot @deckingman
                                        last edited by

                                        @deckingman Yeah, IceSL keeps track of its estimated time, and presumably uses these estimates to inject the commands at "the right moment" based on the rate that you say it can heat/cool.

                                        It's not precise, because you can only provide one value for both heating and cooling. But, if the estimates of the movement time are close enough to the reality of the machine, it gets us closer to wasting less time.

                                        The only "issue" is that it's going nuts setting the standby temp to whatever it pleases. It seems to make very sensible decisions based on my initial observations, but it will be best to keep a close eye on it during first prints.

                                        *not actually a robot

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

                                          @bot Clever 👍

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

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

                                            Yeah, @bot that sounds pretty darn clever, and sounds like exactly what the Jubilee group (toolchanger) is seeking. Where can I take a look at detail?

                                            Delta / Kossel printer fanatic

                                            botundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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