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    Microstepping (interpolation)

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    • PeterAundefined
      PeterA @deckingman
      last edited by

      @deckingman Much appreciated. Looks like i will stick to the 16. 👍

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      • matt3oundefined
        matt3o @deckingman
        last edited by

        @deckingman I see a lot of people using 128 microsteps (with interpolation) on XY in corexy. I don't know if it's because some extensive testing or it's just psychological 🙂

        I guess it's all down to how good the driver is at interpolating...

        deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • deckingmanundefined
          deckingman @matt3o
          last edited by

          @matt3o said in Microstepping (interpolation):

          @deckingman I see a lot of people using 128 microsteps (with interpolation) on XY in corexy. I don't know if it's because some extensive testing or it's just psychological 🙂

          I guess it's all down to how good the driver is at interpolating...

          As a general rule, 16x micro stepping with a 20 tooth pulley will give 80 steps per mm for X and Y on a CoreXY. So in theory, that's a resolution of 1/80th mm per micro-step. There are many reasons why producing something by squirting molten filament out of a nozzle will lead to size variances much greater than that. Also, the positional accuracy of a stepper motor is generally +_ 5% of a full step. That doesn't change with micro-stepping. Whether one divides a full step into 16 smaller steps or 128 smaller steps the positional accuracy will still be +_5% of a FULL step. So if 16x micro-stepping isn't the limiting factor, why increase it when all it will do is potentially over load the CPU which will either limit the maximum print speed, or lead to hiccups and missed steps?

          I think it's just a "more must be better" syndrome without a full understanding of the implications. Just like most people think that a super lightweight hot end will be better than moderately heavy hot end, even though the higher mass of the heavier hot end is not the limiting factor on how fast one can print.

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

          dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @deckingman
            last edited by

            As @deckingman says, we recommend using x16 microstepping with interpolation enabled; except that in some situations (particularly un-geared extruders with low steps/mm), increasing extruder microstepping improves print quality.

            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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            • PeterAundefined
              PeterA
              last edited by

              Thanks for the feed back. Very helpful

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              • owlfabundefined
                owlfab
                last edited by owlfab

                Noise is the biggest thing for me.

                Would you guys expect much of a noise difference between 16x with interpolation and 256x assuming the CPU can keep up? I'm on a Duet2 running 0.9 degree steppers and rapid movements get limited when I go to 256x. For whatever it's worth, I feel like the Prusa mk3 machines are quieter than mine for rapids, but I realize there are a lot of other variables as well.

                deckingmanundefined matt3oundefined Vetiundefined 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • deckingmanundefined
                  deckingman @owlfab
                  last edited by deckingman

                  @owlfab said in Microstepping (interpolation):

                  .................... Would you guys expect much of a noise difference between 16x with interpolation and 256x assuming the CPU can keep up? .....................

                  No. Because 16X micro-steps interpolated (by the driver chip) into 16 smaller steps each = 16x16 = 256. So what gets sent to the motor is the same in either case.

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

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                  • matt3oundefined
                    matt3o @owlfab
                    last edited by

                    @owlfab you may try enabling stealthChop but with my motors it doesn't make much of a difference

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                    • Vetiundefined
                      Veti @owlfab
                      last edited by

                      @owlfab said in Microstepping (interpolation):

                      I feel like the Prusa mk3 machines are quieter than mine for rapids

                      duet 2 does not have stealthchop. the prusa does. that makes a lot of difference for the noise.

                      matt3oundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • matt3oundefined
                        matt3o @Veti
                        last edited by

                        @Veti ah right duet2... sorry, missed that. Not that on the duet3 I hear any difference, but could be my moons motors

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                        • A Former User?
                          A Former User @PeterA
                          last edited by A Former User

                          @PeterA

                          keep in mind that the more microsteps you introduce the more you divide your overall-torque into smaller incremental-torque. So basically this certainly gives you resolution but only maybe gives you accuracy. Of course if money is no objective to you, you can increase the microstepping endlessly and just buy a "stronger" stepper to have your "old" incremental-torque matched even with more microsteps 🙂 Calculation-formulas for that are provided e.g. here https://www.faulhaber.com/fileadmin/user_upload_global/support/MC_Support/Motors/AppNotes/Faulhaber_AN015_EN.pdf

                          ctilley79undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ctilley79undefined
                            ctilley79 @A Former User
                            last edited by

                            @LB said in Microstepping (interpolation):

                            @PeterA

                            keep in mind that the more microsteps you introduce the more you divide your overall-torque into smaller incremental-torque. So basically this certainly gives you resolution but only maybe gives you accuracy. Of course if money is no objective to you, you can increase the microstepping endlessly and just buy a "stronger" stepper to have your "old" incremental-torque matched even with more microsteps 🙂 Calculation-formulas for that are provided e.g. here https://www.faulhaber.com/fileadmin/user_upload_global/support/MC_Support/Motors/AppNotes/Faulhaber_AN015_EN.pdf

                            Isn't this a little misleading if you're in interpolation mode? The driver is essentially running at 256x. The microprocessor is only generating 16x of them, but the driver is dividing those out into 256, so essentially the torque will be the same, the only difference is the computational load on the microprocessor increases on higher step rates right?

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

                              Microstep interpolation doesn't increase resolution or accuracy, because the MCU still commands the driver to 1/16 microstep positions; but it does make the motors quieter.

                              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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                              • A Former User?
                                A Former User @ctilley79
                                last edited by A Former User

                                @ctilley79

                                It is totally misleading 😉 Because in reality there is also: Friction, acceleration, jerk, driver-behaviour etc. pp. so the paper from faulhaber only gives you a hint of a ballpark where you end up if you use 1/16th microsteps as "possible-stop-positions" (versus the "interpolation/microply to 256" which is basically "smoothness" as dc42 pointed out, so basically quiteness but the stepper can not "stop"/"hold" on those positions. Basically as I understand it, the "interpolation"/"microplyer" is only that you set your voltage and ampere not in one step to the next 1/16 step, but go there via "quasi-sinusoidal" micro-interpolation LookUpTable for Voltage/Ampere so that it doesn´t shake that much)

                                I would roughly calc with the values in the paper and keep a safe 10-25% distance to it, because of all the other effects not yet in the whole-calculation

                                I usually use as little "possible-stop-position" hard-microsteps but of course use always the interpolation/microplyer microsteps for smoothnes - less workload for the cpu for the step-calculation, because the interpolation happens in the driver-chip. Also there are theories that it might be beneficial for accuracy if you use only full-&halfsteps as possible-stop-steps. Of course then your kinematics has to be adjusted to that

                                Hey - please share your thoughts, experiments and conclusions, might be of help for all of us 😉 we wouldn´t be here if there isn´t anything we wanna learn

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