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    Heater fault

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    Tuning and tweaking
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    • gloomyandyundefined
      gloomyandy @ianborg
      last edited by

      @ianborg That seems very strange. I guess the obvious question is what is different between heating the bed ahead of time v during printing? As previously mentioned a possibility is some form of electrical interference, the other that I can think of is fans? When you run a print do you have fans running and are they blowing over the bed and cooling it? What sort of fan set up do you have? There are options to PID tune the bed with fans running did you try doing that? What happens if before heating the bed at the start of the print you move the bed away from the nozzle? Does that help at all?

      ianborgundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • ianborgundefined
        ianborg @gloomyandy
        last edited by

        @gloomyandy appreciate the reply. No fans running during warm up.
        the bed does heat up just fine and holds the temp during prints perfectly.
        i just get a fault that it's taking too long to heat up, when I searched the forums, I see a few other folks
        with the same / similar setup (750w heaters) also mention slow heating or issues. I don't have any issues waiting as it doesn't take all that long. my problem is duet is generating a fault and saying it's rising too slowly. I would like to make that go away, if it take 5 minutes then fine. i just don't want the fault, i clear it. heat the bed up and start the print and it's fine from there.

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        • ianborgundefined
          ianborg
          last edited by

          Looking through more post and docs, i think M570 is going to be my friend.
          am going to try that out

          ianborgundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ianborgundefined
            ianborg @ianborg
            last edited by

            hey what do you know.. no faults after adding m570 command, default i think was 3 seconds, i set to 10 and number of times set to 10 and it's off an printing.
            it took 3 minutes to go from 20c to 90c, as i watched, it appeared to go slower as it approached set temp. so I'm guessing I can tune it better. but 3 minute is fine for me to heat up.

            droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • droftartsundefined
              droftarts administrators @ianborg
              last edited by

              @ianborg I expect there's a bit of latency between the heater starting to heat, and the temperature sensor sensing any change, most likely because of the position of the temperature sensor relative to the heater is not ideal. When you start heating, does it initially take a while to start heating, and the initial heating is a curve?

              Most likely using M570 as you have is probably the easiest way around it. You can calculate the heater parameters yourself, see https://docs.duet3d.com/en/User_manual/Connecting_hardware/Heaters_tuning#setting-the-model-parameters-manually, and also adjust the heating parameters, see https://docs.duet3d.com/en/User_manual/Connecting_hardware/Heaters_tuning#manual-adjustments-to-the-heater-model-parameters

              Ian

              Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

              ianborgundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • ianborgundefined
                ianborg @droftarts
                last edited by ianborg

                @droftarts bedheaterfault.jpg

                got me again today, you can see it was almost to 90c
                then
                Heater 0 fault: temperature rising too slowly: expected 0.40°C/sec measured 0.12°C/sec
                I set my m570 more aggressive.

                I don't think 3 minutes to 90c is long to wait at all. sure I'd love it faster, but there are limits to how fast you can heat something up.

                ianborgundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ianborgundefined
                  ianborg @ianborg
                  last edited by ianborg

                  This post is deleted!
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                  • ianborgundefined
                    ianborg
                    last edited by

                    M307 H0 R1.0 K0.250:0.000 D5 E1.35 S1.00 B0
                    been trial and erroring this.. that setup seems to heat up fast and not give a fault.

                    droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • droftartsundefined
                      droftarts administrators @ianborg
                      last edited by

                      @ianborg From the heater curve on the graph you posted, it does look like the heater is getting close to the maximum heat it can achieve. Controlling it at this point does get a bit squirrelly, because the heating rate isn't what is expected. Not much you can do about that, apart from what you've already done, unfortunately. Did you tune it at 90C with M303, or lower?

                      Ian

                      Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                      troydemingundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • troydemingundefined
                        troydeming @droftarts
                        last edited by

                        @droftarts

                        I just jumped in to express the same exact problem. Just got my printer back up again after along break. Ill try your solution and see how it works for me.

                        troydemingundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • troydemingundefined
                          troydeming @troydeming
                          last edited by

                          @troydeming
                          So I got home today and did the PID autotune and it is running perfectly now. Happy Camper am I

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