Hollow shaft extruder
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@mrehorstdmd said in Hollow shaft extruder:
How are you going to rotate the filament drive screw?
The whole part is mounted on the stepper shaft and rotates. That's why I'm worried about the knurled screw being a substantial offcenter mass...
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@o_lampe I see. I thought the screw was the only rotating part. Interesting approach- much easier to fabricate compared to the designs in the posts above.
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@mrehorstdmd said in Hollow shaft extruder:
much easier to fabricate compared to the designs in the posts above.
Yes it is, although you'd need a lathe to make the screw. Same problem as most other screw extruder designs.
I'm also unsure, if the pressure bearings add some extra friction, because they don't roll off in line with the filament motion.
All other designs have the same cant angle for all bearings/screws for a reason. -
@o_lampe I didn't consider the filament path being a spot where it might flex, that's a good point. The non canted bearings in the door, I considered trying to find a way of adding a 20 degree angle, but then I got to thinking that would decrease the length that the filament is backed and pushed firmly into the groved roller. That length is already limited by the angle of the grooved roller. The shaft for the roller I was intending to be 3mm carbon rod. The bolt and spring for the door is offset because the outer frame is actually 2 pieces so the roller assembly can be inserted. I have a couple different designs I'm playing with in cad and have ordered some sls parts to mess with. Waiting currently on shoulder bolts from China, apparently the boat must be stuck in a canal somewhere. As far as balancing I could prob get it close by calculating up the individual pieces with their specifical gravity and get close. I don't know if I'll try and make this, I might, just figured I'd throw it out for people to think about.
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updated on printables
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@breed That looks better. If you want to counterbalance the hinge-bolt, you might want to put the two clamping bolts to the back and use inserts in the door?
But you'll need some fine tuning anyway, I guess. No one likes horizontal vibrations on his effector. -
May be PEEK countersunk head screws are an option for this.
Gruß, zero K
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Hi guys, I have been on holiday for a few week, hence the radio silence.
Nice work from several of you.
@zero-K how does your extruder do?
@breed Your pressure bearings that aren't canted will probably be fine with many filaments. Quite some time back I tried a VDE-100 with only plain bearings (i.e. no edge) and it had very little grip. I think that was with PLA. I conclude that filament slides over plain bearings very easily. Something like TPU might be a different matter, though.
@o_lampe I got the carriers, thanks. Now I have my work cut out for me grinding bearings! On the plus side, one of the users on the 3D Printing discord server is working on a Dremel attachment to help with this.
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@oliof I'd be interested as well. Would this be a hollow shaft nema 14 round pancake?
I like the greater performance to weight of the ratio of the BLDC but I think I'll stick with stepper unless someone has a single board solution to running a magnetic encoder and simplefoc.I picked up a hollow shaft nema 14 mentioned earlier in this thread. I'm planning to test with some hardened steel pipe cutter blades.
Has anyone used a dual shaft stepper with a push/pull configuration? If the back to back bearings bode well for pushing force, additional blade contact could do the same.
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@lee-iii-will said in Hollow shaft extruder:
Has anyone used a dual shaft stepper with a push/pull configuration?
My small NEMA08 has a dual shaft, but I haven't thought of a push/pull config yet. The problem will be to align both cuts into one.
The back2back solution seems better, because the bearings support each other against the offcenter-pressure they have to endure.
Your pipe cutter blades won't have that problem, but will they be small enough to mesh? So far everything above 8-9mm diameter has shown issues. -
@o_lampe I did initially think of the cut alignment as an issue but I think the solution should be easy enough. My initial solution was to mount one roller set, feed filament and then thread the other roller set onto the filament and shaft at the same time for alignment. You may be absolutely right about the back to back design being more efficient though.
I did see discussion about the diameter of the threaded rollers in some places when I was researching this last year. I've got a micro pipe cutter that has a cutting wheel < 10mm, but I'm still trying to source replacement blades. -
@lee-iii-will One thing to watch out for with a large gap between the pusher and puller sets of wheels is when thread compression happens. The larger the distance along the filament between wheels the greater the alignment challenge when the thread pitch changes. On the other hand, with greater misalignment there will also be more force against the side of the groove and potentially more thrust. I think whether it works or not can only really be established by testing.
Hardened steel wheels are interesting. I have assumed (without actually testing it) that sharpened bearing flanges will be chewed up by glass or carbon filled filament. I would hope hardened steel might be able to handle these filaments.
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https://a.aliexpress.com/_mK0e0jY
Anyone seen this yet
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@breed Well that's very interesting. And also confusing: who is this marketed at? It claims to be for a "Funssor rolling screw extruder" but Funssor don't appear to sell those. The image is taken from https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5447706, which is a re-upload of David Leitner's screw extruder. I wonder how long it's been available on Ali.
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@tombrazier said in Hollow shaft extruder:
It claims to be for a "Funssor rolling screw extruder" but Funssor don't appear to sell those.
Let's play devils advocate: They cloned his design and ordered a few thousand of these screw rollers. But then figured out it dosn't work as expected.
So they sell them seperately (for a surprisingly high price). -
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@tombrazier showed up 9-17-23 according to the funssor new items page. Does anyone know if this design works? I'll order a set and print the parts from that link and give them a shot. That's a pretty little design, I like how he solved the hollow stepper issue.
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@breed I guess it will work somehow, but the NEMA14 will have problems to spin fast enough. Davit Leitner wrote, he'll make a BLDC version, which I've posted (and printed) in this thread.
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@breed Ah I was looking at https://www.funssor3dp.com/ and found nothing. Didn't think to check the Aliexpress store. I wonder whether the two are related at all.
David did post videos on YouTube of a functioning extruder so it definitely works to some degree. One thing I would want to test is whether it retracts and de-retracts without accurately. Another would be whether it grinds up the filament considering how many "teeth" will be contacting the filament. If making one myself I think I would try to arrange for all the threads to fall into just one or (probably) two grooves.
I agree with @o_lampe and @Herve_Smith that these are rather expensive although I note that they are a lot cheaper than buying a metal lathe so maybe that's was in the seller's mind when setting the price. There have been 3 sales so far - I wonder who is planning to make these extruders other than @breed.
I am now beginning to wonder whether we might be able to persuade them to list sharpened flanged bearings. (Maybe for not so great a markup!)