• Tags
  • Documentation
  • Order
  • Register
  • Login
Duet3D Logo Duet3D
  • Tags
  • Documentation
  • Order
  • Register
  • Login

Slow down before endstop?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved
CNC
11
101
6.6k
Loading More Posts
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • undefined
    jens55
    last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:13

    Another method that is often used with CNC mills is to allow the switch to be bypassed. Instead of the carriage directly activating the end switch, the switch is mounted to the side and a lever is used to activate it. The carriage approaches the lever and depresses it which activates the end stop switch but there is no hard stop so if it takes a mm for the carriage to stop, nothing is harmed.
    You could use a micro switch with a lever with a roller on the end and have a protrusion on the carriage that activates the lever without running into a stop.
    Hard to explain but very simple and effective.

    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 19:19 Reply Quote 3
    • undefined
      theKM @chimaeragh
      last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:14

      @chimaeragh ...the "you're close" switch I imagine would be ignored unless explicitly told to watch for it when homing, otherwise the machine would just calculate if it's in bounds and do its thing, and stop with the e-stops if something went horribly wrong (jammed, lost steps, blah blah).

      I'm also thinking that a swiping/roller style micro switch would work fine and wouldn't be triggered by waste material.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • undefined
        fcwilt @chimaeragh
        last edited by fcwilt 29 Aug 2021, 19:16

        @chimaeragh said in Slow down before endstop?:

        @fcwilt With CNC machining, being the messy process it is, isn't there a possibility of this sensor being triggered by waste material falling on it and breaking the beam?

        Sorry, I missed the fact that this was posted in the CNC section.

        You could likely arrange the sensor so swarf wouldn't block it but during homing operations you wouldn't be creating any would you?

        And the activation of the sensor is only meaningfull during a homing operation, any other activations are simply ignored.

        Frederick

        Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • undefined
          theKM @fcwilt
          last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:17

          @fcwilt ...sounds perfect, what's the g-code and inputs look like for that?... is it just like the usual "travel until switch" gcode, and then the next line is a new feedrate?

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • undefined
            theKM @jens55
            last edited by theKM 29 Aug 2021, 19:19

            @jens55 ...the arm sliding/roller was what I was thinking, but just curious about the hookups and g-code, is it just having the new feedrate on the next line with some distance to travel after that?

            (I guess line after is the new feedrate, then after that the usual "travel until endstop")

            undefined undefined undefined 3 Replies Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 19:20 Reply Quote 0
            • undefined
              jens55 @theKM
              last edited by jens55 29 Aug 2021, 19:20

              @thekm, this is one of my homex.g codes:

              G91 ; relative positioning
              G1 Z5 F6000 H2 ; lift Z relative to current position
              G1 H1 X-550 F6000 ; move quickly to X axis endstop and stop there (first pass)
              G1 X5 F6000 ; go back a few mm
              G1 H1 X-550 F360 ; move slowly to X axis endstop once more (second pass)
              G1 Z-5 F6000 H2 ; lower Z again
              G90 ; absolute positioning

              This is on a 500 mm x axis hence the '550'

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • undefined
                chimaeragh @theKM
                last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:25

                @thekm May need to use conditional gcode in this one

                Duet 2 Wifi, Ooznest Workbee CNC 1510

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • undefined
                  fcwilt @theKM
                  last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:27

                  @thekm said in Slow down before endstop?:

                  @...the arm sliding/roller was what I was thinking, but just curious about the hookups and g-code, is it just having the new feedrate on the next line with some distance to travel after that?

                  (I guess line after is the new feedrate, then after that the usual "travel until endstop")

                  If you can arrange things so that the sensor is triggered a suitable distance before the end of travel and remain triggered until the end of travel I believe you would be fine with one sensor, be it a micro-switch equipped with a roller, an IR sensor, an inductive sensor, etc.

                  The important thing being is that the sensor cannot be struck by the moving part.

                  For example on one of my printers that uses the IR sensors the axis is 300mm long and the sensor triggers at 280 and remains so until 300.

                  So even at a high speed there is plenty of time for it to stop. Then I back off a bit and do it again at a slow speed to improve accuracy.

                  Frederick

                  Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 19:45 Reply Quote 0
                  • undefined
                    theKM @fcwilt
                    last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:45

                    @fcwilt the backup-and-go-again is an accuracy thing. In my case, it's the stopping at speed that is the problem. it really needs to decelerate to go slow before being told to stop.

                    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 19:52 Reply Quote 0
                    • undefined
                      fcwilt @theKM
                      last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 19:52

                      @thekm said in Slow down before endstop?:

                      @fcwilt the backup-and-go-again is an accuracy thing. In my case, it's the stopping at speed that is the problem. it really needs to decelerate to go slow before being told to stop.

                      Well if you can say with certainty how long it takes to stop then you can position the one sensor at an appropriate location.

                      The important thing is that the sensor remain triggered from that position until the end of travel.

                      Normal moves have controlled acceleration/deceleration. I don't know what controls deceleration when an endstop is triggered - I would need to do some research.

                      Frederick

                      Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 20:12 Reply Quote 0
                      • undefined
                        theKM @fcwilt
                        last edited by theKM 29 Aug 2021, 20:12

                        @fcwilt ...I get what you're saying, it stops wherever it stops, then re-measure it. But again, it is the stopping that is the problem. When it stops, it a hard stop. It's asking a very heavy machine to stop instantly, and the inertia is putting a lot of unnecessary strain on the ballscrews, the crunch is terrible. Nobody mechanically minded would think that the crunch is the sound of a properly operating machine during regular operation 🙂

                        ...so I'm after a way for the controller to apply the max deceleration value and slow it down nicely ahead of the stop.

                        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 20:42 Reply Quote 0
                        • undefined
                          fcwilt @theKM
                          last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 20:42

                          @thekm said in Slow down before endstop?:

                          ...so I'm after a way for the controller to apply the max deceleration value and slow it down nicely ahead of the stop.

                          The greater the deceleration the more abrupt the stop - I think you need less deceleration.

                          Let me do a test to see what settings control deceleration at an endstop. Won't take but an hour or two.

                          Frederick

                          Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                          undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 20:52 Reply Quote 0
                          • undefined
                            theKM @fcwilt
                            last edited by theKM 29 Aug 2021, 20:52

                            @fcwilt ...correct, this is the setting used to describe the fastest rate the machine can accelerate or decelerate, so when it's processing tool paths it slows down and speeds up appropriately for corners.

                            But the controller doesn't use these settings for the homing/move-until-switch operations, which is a hard, abrupt stop. If i could just tell it to apply the max deceleration and stop gracefully, that's what I'm after... as I could then tell it to slow down and measure the hard stop point in the usual way.

                            I super appreciate the help!!!

                            ...until I found the max accel/decel settings, watching it take hard corners like a 3d printer was really horrible 🙂

                            undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 23:07 Reply Quote 0
                            • undefined
                              jens55
                              last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 21:26

                              I don't get why you wouldn't use one of the two options given. What is wrong with using an end stop switch mounted off to the side with a lever and roller and activated by the carriage?
                              Also, we are talking a single move in the x an y axis that is executed when the machine is initially turned on. 'Crawling' to the end stop would be painful but there is also no reason for the machine to go at maximum speed. You may loose 5 seconds per axis first thing in the morning but does that really matter?
                              Pick a speed that works for you, change the end stop switch to one that you don't 'run into' and you are set. I don't see the issue .....

                              undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 22:03 Reply Quote 0
                              • undefined
                                theKM @jens55
                                last edited by theKM 29 Aug 2021, 22:03

                                @jens55 ...what I have seen are suggestions for switches. And that's cool. It was my plan to use exactly the switch ideas mentioned (micro switches with long arms and rollers).

                                Except for my car and tractor, this CNC machine is the heaviest thing that I own, it is a brick. It is also just shy of being the size of a queen sized bed. Telling the gantry to stop instantly without decelerating is prohibitive unless it is crawling. If this was about "5 seconds per axis" I would not have posted, I promise.

                                I want to look after the machine and I would like to be more productive when using it, and so I need a way to tell it to slow down when it passes a switch so it can be moving slow enough to stop dead when it actually gets to the e-stop.

                                At the moment I'm just using the e-stops for emergencies only to stop the machine dead, and just hope I don't put in any action in that hits them while trying to manage the job space... because whenever I trigger the e-stops I have to go over all the job setup again because the controller has reset, like it should when it hits emergency stops as it thinks it's an emergency. So, it would be much more productive if I could let the machine discover its work area before running jobs.

                                As indicated by other responses though, I'm not the only one who would like to take advantage of this efficiency.

                                undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 22:24 Reply Quote 0
                                • undefined
                                  jens55 @theKM
                                  last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 22:24

                                  @thekm said in Slow down before endstop?:

                                  It is also just shy of being the size of a queen sized bed.

                                  Ahhh .... a 'serious' sized machine ....

                                  At the moment I'm just using the e-stops for emergencies

                                  I am now confused as to how we got to e-stops (as in emergency stop) as compared to an end stop. Probably just a slip of the tongue/keyboard but those are not the same thing.

                                  So if I understand you correctly now, you are concerned not about the carriage hitting the end stop (or at least that's not the only issue) but rather you want the carriage to slow down also because you think that the sudden stop might be too hard on the machine.
                                  If that is the case then yes, mounting another sensor close to the actual end stop would be the way to go. Yes, it will involve some tricky gcode programming because you will need to sense the carriage passing that switch and then reducing the speed. Unfortunately I can't help with the programing of that. Most Duet setups have enough sensor lines that it shouldn't be an issue to connect a suitable sensor.

                                  Good luck and please share your final setup.

                                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 23:19 Reply Quote 0
                                  • undefined
                                    fcwilt @theKM
                                    last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 23:07

                                    @thekm said in Slow down before endstop?:

                                    But the controller doesn't use these settings for the homing/move-until-switch operations, which is a hard, abrupt stop. If i could just tell it to apply the max deceleration and stop gracefully, that's what I'm after... as I could then tell it to slow down and measure the hard stop

                                    So you have verified that M204 does not effect homing moves - those like G1 H1?

                                    And I take it simply using a nice, slow speed would simply take too much time?

                                    Frederick

                                    Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                                    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 23:35 Reply Quote 0
                                    • undefined
                                      theKM @jens55
                                      last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 23:19

                                      @jens55 ...it's fun time to hang out in CNC forums, machines hitting endstops are equivalent to the world ending and should be nuked from orbit (actual quote from someone else on the topic). If it's not expected to hit endstops, then it's the only indicator there is of the machine knowing that things are not good, and it should die as quickly as possible. Powerful machines with powerful tools, plasma cutters, etc etc... it's a reasonable attitude to take, and the endstops are often wired into the same loop as the emergency stop button, and wired to be closed, so if anything breaks the circuit it all stops.

                                      CNC forums are fun, but none will have specifics on the Duet gcode things.

                                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 23:26 Reply Quote 1
                                      • undefined
                                        jens55 @theKM
                                        last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 23:26

                                        @thekm, I agree that a machine should not collide with the end stop. That is why I suggested the sideways switch which does not allow a collision to happen.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • undefined
                                          theKM @fcwilt
                                          last edited by 29 Aug 2021, 23:35

                                          @fcwilt said in Slow down before endstop?:

                                          M204

                                          I set it with 201, which the docco says 204 will reference as to not exceed.

                                          am curious if 205 will do anything though...

                                          undefined 2 Replies Last reply 29 Aug 2021, 23:39 Reply Quote 0
                                          18 out of 101
                                          • First post
                                            18/101
                                            Last post
                                          Unless otherwise noted, all forum content is licensed under CC-BY-SA