D-PATCH
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@oliof Yeah you are right - I found these videos, too, when I started to look into tool changing Delta printers, but not many infos out there.
About your question - yeah a little more brain juice went into the design of the locking mechanism.
So it is basically a bayonet lock that is driven by a Bowden cable and reset by a bunch of springsThe pieces of the bayonet that lock the tool are angled so a downward force is created by the rotation of the bayonet. It is locking onto 3 zylindrical pins that are placed 120° apart from each other so that the locking is uniformly
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Pretty cool! I hope you publish your design one day as this would be an interesting setup for three printers down my ideas to build (orthogonal tripteron, or sextupteron). But that's a couple years out optimistically speaking (-:
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Thanks that you like it! Yeah as soon as this version will be finished I'm thinking about publish the files under CC-BY-NC so that the community can use it
BTW: I really love your unconventional tripteron design!
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The design is not mine though. That credit goes to Evan Callicoat.
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Started working on the Tool-Changer itself
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Hey guys,
worked a little bit more on the printer.
I got the first automatic tool change (even if it needs a little more tuning), but it's a first step in the "proof of concept" direction (which I already did with the first prototyp). -
@taconite that's a cool design. Where did you get the tapered metal parts?
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@fšk thank you
I designed the tool so, that it utalizes standard stock material. The tapered part was done by a friend of mine on a standard lathe. -
Tool Change Scripts
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Tool Changing of two tools can be seen here:
https://youtu.be/nLvNUum48fgupcoming is the first multi-material print
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@taconite that's a nice tool changer!
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@taconite Hey any thoughts about preventing heat-creep after a (hot) tool is placed back on the carousel?
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@JoergS5 Thank you
@jpomo10 of course ;). There are multiple options:-
set the stand-by temperature so low, that a equilibrium is reached
(+ no additional fans, - long heat up time) -
one fan for each tool in parking position
(+ sufficient cooling, - lot of fans with lots of noise) -
one bigger fan with a fan-duct to direct the air to the heat sinks of the tools in parking position
For now I have no fans at all. So after the first prints I had not a lot of heat creep and no problems with jams. But I guess I will move on with option 3
BTW: I posted another video of the first dual color print on youtube
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this looks like a sci fi attack hovercraft
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@taconite Thanks for the reply!
Is the tool-changer "carriage" set up as an additional axis? How does it increment along with the Z-axis?
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@jpomo10
Yep it is set up as U axis. I wrote a custom post-processing script for cura -
Hey guys,
I keep posting small videos - some are not really special but I still want to share them with you: https://youtu.be/6-CR_1vN3cE
In this small video I print with my go-to 100mm/s-profile
And I just uploaded a video of the change of 4 tools
https://youtu.be/aJt_HRal5rY -
@taconite Thanks for the links!
Also, check out the posts about a TC Delta on this page: https://twitter.com/deltamaker
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@jpomo10 Nice to see that others are thinking about options aswell.
To be honest these were my first attempts aswell. The first concept was magnets and the second one permanent-electromagnets after that, but after a lot of testing I decided not to use magnets.
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Hello guys,
I went a new way for the cooling of the tools without some parts of the sci fi attack hovercraft.
I added a fan to each tool instead. The data shows that the cooling is sufficient.