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    Hotend heater fine tuning

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    • Phaedruxundefined
      Phaedrux Moderator @kb58
      last edited by

      @kb58 said in Hotend heater fine tuning:

      V26.2

      You appear to be a bit over the 24v target.

      What does M122 say your vin voltage is? Have you checked your PSU output voltage with a multimeter and dialed it in with the adjustment pot?

      Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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      • kb58undefined
        kb58 @Phaedrux
        last edited by

        @phaedrux That is what the supply is, 26V or so. I purposely adjusted it on the high side to lessen the current requirements. I think that voltage was "auto appended" to the calculated values and was accurate, so I let it be.

        Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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        • Phaedruxundefined
          Phaedrux Moderator
          last edited by

          Well that over voltage on your 24v heater is probably making it heat up faster than predicted.

          I would try reducing your voltage to 24v and tuning again to see if the behaviour is different.

          What command did you use to tune? Are you tuning as a tool (M303 T), or plain heater (M303 H)? When tuning as a tool, the part cooling fan will be engaged to take it's cooling power into account.

          Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @kb58
            last edited by

            @kb58 I think that text is incorrect. If the temperature overshoots, increase the R parameter. Don't increase it too much, or you will get "temperature rising too slowly" heating faults. Try an increase of 20% above the value reported when you ran M303.

            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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            • kb58undefined
              kb58 @dc42
              last edited by

              @dc42 Thanks, guys, I'll try both.

              Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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              • kb58undefined
                kb58 @Phaedrux
                last edited by kb58

                @phaedrux I haven't been interpreting the voltage value in M307 the way you're describing it. I understood it to mean that I'm telling the system what voltage is normally being used, and if the voltage later drifts from that value, the PID routine will adjust for it. The description in the Gcode Dictionary appears to back that up:

                Vnnn VIN supply voltage at which the A parameter was calibrated (RepRapFirmware 1.20 and later). This allows the PID controller to compensate for changes in supply voltage. A value of zero disables compensation for changes in supply voltage. Use V0 for AC mains powered heaters. (V0 is the default. Leaving off V is the same as V0)

                To answer your other question, I was using M303 H and am now running an M303 T to see what happens.

                Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                • kb58undefined
                  kb58 @kb58
                  last edited by kb58

                  @kb58 Here's what I meant about the reported inconsistent heater warning during the M303 calibration, yet it sure looks consistent to me. FWIW, this never happened when the hot end heater and sensor were controlled by the 6HC board.

                  db0e37e0-6409-4429-9ce5-1fad25a11344-image.png

                  Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                  • kb58undefined
                    kb58 @kb58
                    last edited by

                    @kb58 Still failing for the same reasons:

                    25b27fd4-e56e-488a-b0b5-e777e0386ca5-image.png

                    Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                    • kb58undefined
                      kb58 @kb58
                      last edited by kb58

                      @kb58 Increasing the "R" parameter in the M307 heater PID config has no effect, much like decreasing it. It makes me wonder if somehow the entire PID control is disabled, yet when I command it to a temperature, it does go there. In this thread, it consistently peaks 8 deg C above the set point before falling back. How the PID terms are not affecting has me puzzled.

                      Here's the relevant part of config.g:

                      ; Nozzle heater and sensor
                      M308 S1 P"121.temp0" Y"pt1000" A"Hot end" L-25		; define hot end temperature sensor on toolboard temp0
                      M950 H1 C"121.out0" T1                                	; create nozzle heater output on toolboard out0
                      M307 H1 B0 R3.200 C160.8 D9.84 S1.00 V26.2		; set PID constants (from autotune, M303)
                      M143 H1 S280		                               	; set temperature limit for heater 1 to 280C
                      
                      
                      

                      Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                      • Topherundefined
                        Topher @kb58
                        last edited by

                        @kb58 I had the exact same overshoot problem. Im running the same hotend as you too and 27.00volts on our buss being distributed to the entire rack holding 36 printers. I was able to solve it by running my tuning with less power determined by the P in M303 and also running T0 and F255 accounting for the cooling fan. Set your temp for the highest you will go and start with a 20% reduction on your P value ie P0.80.

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                        • kb58undefined
                          kb58 @Topher
                          last edited by

                          @leckietech Interesting. I will try that, and thank you!

                          Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                          • kb58undefined
                            kb58
                            last edited by kb58

                            This is both amusing and annoying...

                            Tried the 0.8 trick above, which worked, and it successfully completed the M303 calibration. Loaded the new calibration values:

                             M307 H1 B0 R4.479 C161.3:92.0 D8.69 S0.80 V26.3
                            

                            The hotend was allowed to cool, then set it to 205C. Irritatingly, it again overshot by 8C, exactly as before. It's almost as if the tuning parameters are being ignored.
                            58cdb400-1691-45ea-a8bd-6c71e08cc9b3-image.png

                            It works well enough that I can get on with printing, but it's annoying that the tuning parameters seemingly have little or no effect.

                            Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                            • kb58undefined
                              kb58
                              last edited by kb58

                              Hmm, I wonder what's going on here. Aside from the hotend heater issue, the bed heater has always had a bit of the opposite problem: being a bit casual about achieving the target temperature (60C). It gets there eventually and maintains temperature well, but it's very slow to get there. I would expect a small amount of overshoot given that it's a PID-tuned 750W 115VAC heater.
                              The top line is what the parameters were, and the bottom line shows what the R factor was changed to. Again, just like the hotend heater, it made no difference. I'm wondering why no one else has experienced this, so it's probably something I've set wrong.

                              ;M307 H0 B0 R0.394 C847.1 D16.26 S1.00		        ; set PID constants (from autotune, M303)
                              M307 H0 B0 R0.47 C847.1 D16.26 S1.00		        ; set PID constants (from autotune, M303)
                              

                              Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                              • Phaedruxundefined
                                Phaedrux Moderator @kb58
                                last edited by

                                @kb58 said in Hotend heater fine tuning:

                                It's almost as if the tuning parameters are being ignored.

                                How are you saving the tuned parameters? M500 after tuning and having M501 at the end of config.g? Or are you manually entering them in config.g? And if you're manually entering them, do you also have M501 at the end of config.g and a config-override.g file?

                                Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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                                • kb58undefined
                                  kb58 @Phaedrux
                                  last edited by kb58

                                  @phaedrux Thank you for the reply.

                                  I manually copy/pasted the results produced by the PID tuning process into config.g. I do not have an M501 at the end of config.g, and was expecting that the printer would use the values in config.g. Since it doesn't work though, I'm not understanding something.

                                  Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                                  • Phaedruxundefined
                                    Phaedrux Moderator
                                    last edited by

                                    As a test, could you send M500 after tuning so that a config-override.g file gets generated and then compare the resulting line to what you had manually entered?

                                    Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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                                    • kb58undefined
                                      kb58 @Phaedrux
                                      last edited by kb58

                                      @phaedrux Performed "M303 P0.8 S200 T0", and it failed with the same claim that the heater was inconsistent yet the plot appears okay:

                                      fa4b1f56-66c3-459b-90f0-b8c0f0d42620-image.png

                                      Regardless, an M500 was commanded and the printer reported:
                                      dfcd74d6-eaab-40aa-92ce-cc4c8b96b59a-image.png

                                      The contents of config-override.g:

                                      ; config-override.g file generated in response to M500 at 2021-08-06 14:03
                                      ; This is a system-generated file - do not edit
                                      ; Heater model parameters
                                      M307 H0 R0.470 C847.100:847.100 D16.26 S1.00 V0.0 B0 I0
                                      M307 H1 R4.613 C146.384:98.384 D8.03 S0.80 V26.3 B0 I0
                                      ; Workplace coordinates...
                                      

                                      Comparing the two:
                                      M307 H1 R4.613 C146.384:98.384 D8.03 S0.80 V26.3 B0 I0 ; recommended by the PID tuning routine to be stored in config.g
                                      M307 H1 B0 R4.613 C146.4:98.4 D8.03 S0.80 V26.3 ; created by M500

                                      Where do I go from here?

                                      Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                                      • Phaedruxundefined
                                        Phaedrux Moderator @kb58
                                        last edited by

                                        @kb58 said in Hotend heater fine tuning:

                                        Where do I go from here?

                                        Well the results of functionally identical, so I'm not sure where to go from here.

                                        Can you post some photos of the hotend so we can get a sense of what the setup actually is? Getting some eyes on it might give some clues.

                                        Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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                                        • kb58undefined
                                          kb58 @Phaedrux
                                          last edited by kb58

                                          @phaedrux Before I post pictures, what does this actually mean:
                                          8a30a6af-84e8-4164-b146-87a020f3dc64-image.png

                                          What makes the firmware post this? I'd assume it's that it's seeing different temperature changes even though the heater is enabled for the same period of time, but my M303 temperature plots look good, so what is it looking at that makes it unable to succeed?

                                          Scratch-built 350mmx350mm coreXY, linear rails, ballscrews, 3 Z axis, Duet3 6HC, v3.3, Tool Board v1.1, BondTech LGX + Mosquito hot end

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                                          • Phaedruxundefined
                                            Phaedrux Moderator
                                            last edited by

                                            It means that the heating and cooling rates didn't settle down to consistent values after several cycles. One possible reason is noise in the temperature sensor readings, which would be apparent in temperature graph. However, your graph appears to be stable, at least in the time scale it can display.

                                            Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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