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    500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map

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    • Vetiundefined
      Veti @Phaedrux
      last edited by

      @Phaedrux said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

      It's flat, but tilted. Time to level the bed.

      he did, manually and using G32

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      • vistalertundefined
        vistalert
        last edited by

        🙂 Plus the printer in that doco doesn't look much like a Core XY triple Z screw machine #diversity haha

        bed.g and config.g below, I also added my homeall.g as that's usually what else would be involved in my initial sequence.

        BED.G

        ; bed.g
        ; called to perform automatic bed compensation via G32
        ;
        ; generated by RepRapFirmware Configuration Tool v3.1.4 on Tue Oct 20 2020 23:24:44 GMT+0800 (Australian Western Standard Time)

        M561 ; clear bed transform
        M913 X40 Y40 ; drop motor currents

        G30 P0 X450 Y65 Z-99999 F1000 ; probe near front-right leadscrew
        G30 P1 X50 Y65 Z-99999 F1000 ; probe near front-left leadscrew
        G30 P2 X250 Y400 Z-99999 F1000 S3 ; probe near rear leadscrew and calibrate 3 motors

        M913 X100 Y100 ; reset motor currents

        G29 S1 ; load height map

        CONFIG.G

        ; Configuration file for Duet 3 (firmware version 3)
        ; executed by the firmware on start-up
        ;
        ; generated by RepRapFirmware Configuration Tool v3.1.4 on Tue Oct 20 2020 23:24:45 GMT+0800 (Australian Western Standard Time)

        ; General preferences
        G90 ; send absolute coordinates...
        M83 ; ...but relative extruder moves
        M550 P"Duet 3" ; set printer name
        M669 K1 ; select CoreXY mode

        ; SET DIRECTION OF TRAVEL FOR STEPPER MOTORS

        ; X
        M569 P3 S1 ; physical drive 0.3 goes forwards

        ; Y
        M569 P4 S1 ; physical drive 0.4 goes forwards

        ; Z has three steppers
        M569 P0 S0 ; physical drive 0.0 goes forwards - Front left
        M569 P1 S0 ; physical drive 0.1 goes forwards - Front right
        M569 P2 S0 ; physical drive 0.2 goes forwards - Rear Center

        ; Extruder
        M569 P5 S1 ; physical drive 0.5 goes backwards

        ; MAP STEPPERS TO X Y Z - Z HAS THREE DRIVERS ASSIGNED
        M584 Z0:1:2 X3 Y4 E5 ; set driver mapping for XYZ steppers

        M906 X1600 Y1600 Z1600 E1400 I30 ; set motor currents (mA) and motor idle factor in per cent

        M671 X530:-30:250 Y53:53:530 S50 ; Z-screw locations - front right, front left and rear center

        M350 X16 Y16 Z16 E16 I1 ; configure microstepping with interpolation

        M92 X80.00 Y80.00 Z400.00 E409.00 ; set steps per mm
        M566 X900.00 Y900.00 Z12.00 E120.00 ; set maximum instantaneous speed changes (mm/min)
        M203 X30000.00 Y30000.00 Z2000.00 E1200.00 ; set maximum speeds (mm/min)
        M201 X500.00 Y500.00 Z20.00 E250.00 ; set accelerations (mm/s^2)
        M84 S30 ; Set idle timeout

        ; Axis Limits
        M208 X0 Y0 Z0 S1 ; set axis minima
        M208 X500 Y500 Z500 S0 ; set axis maxima

        ; Endstops
        M574 X1 S3 ; configure sensorless endstop for low end on X
        M574 Y1 S3 ; configure sensorless endstop for low end on Y
        M574 Z1 S2 ; configure Z-probe endstop for low end on Z

        ; Z-Probe

        M950 S0 C"io5.out"
        M558 P9 C"io5.in" H7 R1 F120 T10000 A3 S0.03 B1 ; set Z probe type to bltouch and the dive height + speeds
        G31 P500 X-26 Y0 Z2.28 ; set Z probe trigger value, offset and trigger height

        M557 X25:475 Y25:475 S150 ; define mesh grid

        ; Heaters
        M308 S0 P"temp0" Y"thermistor" T100000 B4138 ; configure sensor 0 as thermistor on pin temp0
        M950 H0 C"out0" T0 ; create bed heater output on out0 and map it to sensor 0
        M307 H0 B0 S1.00 ; disable bang-bang mode for the bed heater and set PWM limit
        M140 H0 ; map heated bed to heater 0
        M143 H0 S120 ; set temperature limit for heater 0 to 120C
        M308 S1 P"temp1" Y"thermistor" T100000 B4138 ; configure sensor 1 as thermistor on pin temp1
        M950 H1 C"out1" T1 ; create nozzle heater output on out1 and map it to sensor 1
        M307 H1 B0 S1.00 ; disable bang-bang mode for heater and set PWM limit

        ; Fans
        M950 F0 C"out7" ; create fan 0 on pin out7 and set its frequency
        M106 P0 S0 H-1 C"Part Cooling" ; set fan 0 value. Thermostatic control is OFF

        M950 F1 C"out8" ; create fan 1 on pin out4 and set its frequency
        M106 P1 S1 H1 T45 C"Volcano" ; set fan 1 value. Thermostatic control is ON

        M950 F2 C"out9" ; create fan 0 on pin out5 and set its frequency
        M106 P2 S0 H-1 C"Case 1" ; set fan 2 value. Thermostatic control is OFF

        ; Tools
        M563 P0 S"Volcano" D0 H1 F0 ; define tool 0
        G10 P0 X0 Y0 Z0 ; set tool 0 axis offsets
        G10 P0 R0 S0 ; set initial tool 0 active and standby temperatures to 0C

        M591 P7 C"io0.in" S1 D0 ; Filament runout sensor

        ; Miscellaneous
        M501 ; load saved parameters from non-volatile memory

        HOMEALL.G

        M201 X1000 Y1000 ; reduce acceleration on X/Y to stop false triggers
        M915 P0:1 S3 R0 F0 H400 ; Sensitivity 4, don’t take action, don’t filter, 400steps/sec

        M574 X1 Y1 S3 ; use stall guard for endstops

        G91 ; set relative
        G1 H2 Z5 F1200 ; lower the bed

        ;
        ; X home - using ensorless homing
        M913 X40 Y40 Z100 ; drop motor currents

        G1 H1 X-550 F6000 ; move until the motor stalls - COARSE HOME

        ;
        ; Y home - using sensorless homing
        M913 X40 Y40 Z100 ; drop motor currents

        G1 H1 Y-550 F6000 ; move until the motor stalls - COARSE HOME

        ;
        ; Z home - using Z Probe
        G90 ; absolute positioning
        G1 X250 Y250 F10000 ; go to first probe point
        G30 ; home Z by probing the bed

        M913 X100 Y100 Z100 ; motor currents back to 100%
        M201 X3000 Y3000 ; accel back to original

        Vetiundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Vetiundefined
          Veti @vistalert
          last edited by

          @vistalert said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

          M561 ; clear bed transform
          M913 X40 Y40 ; drop motor currents

          why are you dropping motor currents?

          G30 P0 X450 Y65 Z-99999 F1000 ; probe near front-right leadscrew
          G30 P1 X50 Y65 Z-99999 F1000 ; probe near front-left leadscrew
          G30 P2 X250 Y400 Z-99999 F1000 S3 ; probe near rear leadscrew and calibrate 3 motors
          M913 X100 Y100 ; reset motor currents

          G29 S1 ; load height map

          this should not be here

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          • vistalertundefined
            vistalert
            last edited by

            Motor currents:

            I've been using sensorless homing pending the completion of installing the mechanical endstops, so dropping the currents just helps me avoid any loud thumps if the head/bed runs into something.

            G29 S1 - will delete this

            Vetiundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Vetiundefined
              Veti @vistalert
              last edited by

              @vistalert

              but you are not using sensorless homing for the z. so why are you dropping the current when probing the bed?

              vistalertundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • vistalertundefined
                vistalert @Veti
                last edited by

                @Veti ...remember when the BL Touch logic level was wrong and the bed would hit the nozzle? It's just a safety measure. Are you thinking it might be skipping on the way up/down? I'd not considered that.

                Vetiundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Vetiundefined
                  Veti @vistalert
                  last edited by

                  @vistalert

                  no you are just dropping the x and y current. this makes no sense.

                  vistalertundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • vistalertundefined
                    vistalert @Veti
                    last edited by

                    @Veti yeah I see what you mean. That's all gone now - I've just finished fitting mechanical end stops for X and Y. So I can start testing again tomorrow.

                    Thanks for the input once again.

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                    • theruttmeisterundefined
                      theruttmeister @vistalert
                      last edited by

                      @vistalert said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                      Just to extend the discussion slightly. The glass is sat on my old aluminium plate. What are my next best actions. Should I?

                      1. Bond the 6mm glass to the 4mm aluminium plate? The plate is deformed. To achieve good thermal conduction from the heater pad into the glass, I'd have to bond them, as otherwise there would be "pockets of air" underneath the glass, where the plate drifts away from the glass due to a lack of flatness.

                      2. Or should I (can I) remove the heater pad from the aluminium plate, and
                        a) apply it to a thinner aluminium plate, which in turn would be bonded to the glass
                        (being thinner it would be flatter and can easily be bonded and have weights
                        applied until the adhesive sets)
                        b) apply the heater pad straight to the glass

                      This is a classic conundrum...

                      1. Attaching the glass to the aluminium:
                        Glass basically won't expand at all, at the temps you will run. The aluminium however will expand. Depending on what you use to glue the glass down, you can end up actually breaking the glass when you heat it up. And if it doesn't break, there's a good chance the whole assembly will warp.
                        And getting the sandwich to be flat to begin with is harder than you think. Unless you have a granite reference surface (and even then...)

                      2. Depends on the adhesive. You might be able to get it off, but you'll probably ruin the adhesive in the process... they are not designed to be removed.
                        a) A thin sheet would still have some value as a heat spreader, and reduce the issues related to differential thermal expansion (because it will not be able to exert as much force).
                        b) No issues with thermal expansion, but less uniform heat distribution. Plus if you break the glass...

                      Not helpful I know, but my eventual decision was to just not use glass. Its too fragile and too poor a thermal conductor.
                      Aluminium base, with magnets, steel flex plate with the polymer top-coat of your choice.

                      Isolate, substitute, verify.

                      achrnundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • markzundefined
                        markz
                        last edited by

                        This is just my two cents, but what I ended up doing in a very similar situation was I bought a <10$ silicone baking sheet and put it between the glass and the aluminum. This fills any air pockets and tends to let the glass float flat - or at least that's what I believe. It adds a couple of minutes to the heat-up time but I've used an IR temperature sensor to check bed temperatures and it is remarkably uniform.

                        I also have 3 Z axis motors.

                        I set the bed up about a week ago (using the bed-screws that have springs to straighten it).

                        Before the day starts I do a sanity test 4-point scan with my IR sensor. I've done maybe a dozen or so prints since then and after each print I manually take the glass bed off the sheet, remove the print, then replace the bed. The baking sheet is very non-slip and nothing moves during printing.

                        Here was this morning's scan.

                        Screenshot 2020-10-31 110909.jpg

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                        • achrnundefined
                          achrn @theruttmeister
                          last edited by

                          @theruttmeister said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                          Aluminium base, with magnets, steel flex plate with the polymer top-coat of your choice.

                          Might be getting off topic here, but how is your base arranged? I'm thinking of implementing a magnetic-attached steel sheet, but my current bed arrangement is an aluminium plate with silicone bed heater heater bonded on the bottom and I'm not sure how to work the magnetic into that.

                          One option is an adhesive magnetic sheet on the top of the aluminium, but I basically don't trust they will stay magnetic long at 90C (or hotter - I occasionally print ASA).

                          theruttmeisterundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • theruttmeisterundefined
                            theruttmeister @achrn
                            last edited by

                            @achrn
                            Before the heater was attached, 25 ~6mm holes were drilled through the plate (which is 305x305x6mm).
                            25 6mm (or it could have been 1/4", I don't recall) neodymium magnets were inserted into the plate (which was on a flat surface, so the magnets ended up flush). 2 part epoxy was added to the holes (this is the hardest part, as you need the right kind of epoxy and it needs to get between the magnet and the walls of the hole)... Although I last did this a couple of years ago, so it might have been superglue... There were certainly issues getting the glue right.
                            And the hole must be bigger than the magnets, neodymium magnets are brittle and cannot be press-fitted.

                            The holes are in a grid, the outer edges being about ~12mm in from the edge. The magnets are D6mm L5mm
                            The steel plate is from a buildtac flexplate system (their magnet base kept melting).

                            I don't print in anything too crazy these days, but the curie temp of a good neodymium magnet should be well over 200C, at least according to wikipedia. So you should be good even if you need to print in unreasonable materials.

                            Full credit to Nophead, who I just copied.

                            Isolate, substitute, verify.

                            vistalertundefined Dizzwoldundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • vistalertundefined
                              vistalert @theruttmeister
                              last edited by

                              @theruttmeister @achrn I've ended up ripping off the stick on magnetic layer that was applied to my 4mm plate. I had originally intended to have a magnetic PEI sheet. So this whole hassle of the warped 4mm plate is having some big knock on effects.

                              I tried to put glass straight on top of the 4mm plate, but it rocks around when the aluminium is heated so I think I'm going to use a variation of the silicon idea, whilst I also source a 7mm / 8mm replacement plate.

                              My idea for the silicon is I have some Liquid Silicon Rubber which is intended for casting moulds. So I hope that what I can do is skim a layer of that over the aluminium and it will fill out the voids. I'm still anxious that it will deform when heated though.

                              On the whole I think it's gonna cost me a new aluminium bad and a new bed heater as I don't know if I have any chance of getting the heater off of the 4mm plate.

                              theruttmeisterundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • vistalertundefined
                                vistalert
                                last edited by

                                Well here goes nothing - laid a layer of LSR over it, spread it like you would if you were applying tile cement to a wall, i.e. with a grooved/slotted flat spreader, seems to have run out pretty flat and to the tops of the levelling screws. Will give it the rest of the day to cure then put the glass back on top and see what happens.

                                49e90038-180b-4891-918e-3de95508579b-image.png

                                0a511f84-adb2-4a6d-964b-9ab8d684c66f-image.png

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                                • theruttmeisterundefined
                                  theruttmeister @vistalert
                                  last edited by theruttmeister

                                  @vistalert

                                  I wouldn't have gone down that route myself... silicone rubber is a good insulator, so great for filling those gaps and absorbing any expansion, but its going to take an age for the glass to heat up (although to be fair, the glass is already a good insulator, so the difference might not be that big).

                                  I used to think glass was the best possible bed surface, but I learnt:

                                  1. VERY VERY flat glass isn't that expensive or hard to get your hands on (if you are an OEM at least). BUT, its very fragile. PET tends to eat chunks out of it.
                                  2. Toughened glass is NEVER flat. Not even close.
                                  3. If you are heating it, you need to use borofloat anyway... and that is still fragile and is also not very flat.

                                  I got sick of the cost of replacing broken glass. Hence the aluminium and steel. Well, that and at the time the best self leveling option was an inductive sensor. You don't want to know how much magnetic glass costs...

                                  And provided you only have a very thin layer of silicone, it won't be that hard to remove. Just use a very thin steel wire to cut it from the side. Trying to lever the two pieces apart will just smash the glass.

                                  Isolate, substitute, verify.

                                  Phaedruxundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Phaedruxundefined
                                    Phaedrux Moderator @theruttmeister
                                    last edited by

                                    @theruttmeister said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                                    silicone rubber is a good insulator

                                    Yes, but better than air. Would need to know if there are more air gaps than contact spots to see how it comes out in the wash, but a thin layer may not be too bad really.

                                    Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

                                    theruttmeisterundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • theruttmeisterundefined
                                      theruttmeister @Phaedrux
                                      last edited by

                                      @Phaedrux said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                                      @theruttmeister said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                                      silicone rubber is a good insulator

                                      Yes, but better than air.

                                      ahem

                                      yes, but a better conductor than air.

                                      😉
                                      True.
                                      And you could use copper filled silicone. I seem to recall that being a thing. Marginally better thermal conduction iirc.

                                      Isolate, substitute, verify.

                                      Phaedruxundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • Phaedruxundefined
                                        Phaedrux Moderator @theruttmeister
                                        last edited by

                                        @theruttmeister said in 500x500x6mm glass plate - How to interpret height map:

                                        copper filled silicone

                                        Now you're talking. I used something similar to this to bond my heater to the aluminum plate.

                                        https://www.permatex.com/products/gasketing/ultra-series-gasket-makers/permatex-ultra-copper-maximum-temperature-rtv-silicone-gasket-maker/

                                        Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

                                        theruttmeisterundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • theruttmeisterundefined
                                          theruttmeister @Phaedrux
                                          last edited by

                                          @Phaedrux

                                          That's the thingy!

                                          Hmm... all this talk makes me want to revisit granite beds!

                                          Well, not really. But for about 3 seconds I thought about it.

                                          Isolate, substitute, verify.

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                                          • achrnundefined
                                            achrn
                                            last edited by

                                            There are also thermal gap fillers intended for exactly this purpose - fill a variable gap, normally interfacing a whole region of variable-sized components on a circuit board to a heatsink.
                                            They tend to be ceramic filled silicone, I believe, but there are other flavours (both of filler and of matrix). The example (below) is about a hundred times better conductivity than air, so it would be an mprovement if your air gap is anything over 0.01mm, I guess.
                                            Quite expensive on a moderate size bed though (this is a cheap one): https://uk.farnell.com/electrolube/gp300sl/thermal-gap-pad-200mm-x-200mm/dp/2777028

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