Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints
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@luc It could be the infamous dual drive extruder pattern. Do you have a dual drive extruder?
Maybe the filament tensioner is too tight then?Does the same pattern appear on all sides? If it's only on the opposite side, you might have a mechanical issue with this axis. ( damaged idler bearing or wobbling idler?)
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@o_lampe
Yes, on all sides it is the same.Yes, it is a dual drive extruder. What can I try in this case? Change it? Change it to which one? (I will have to redesign the whole stand).
I don't see that the spring load tension of the dual drive makes any difference. I tried varying it during printing.
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Tried loosening the whole spring of the dual drive extruder without getting any change.
Checked all rollers and pulleys and.....incredible!!!
I have never seen such a thing!!! Belt rubber or maybe dust stuck in the tooth recesses!!!
I can clean it but with the occasion I put two new pulleys.
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@luc This could be many things, and is generally referred to as VFAs (Vertical Fine Artifacts)
Whilst there is not much you can do about it as it could be a variety of issues, I have a few tips that might be able to help find out where the problem lies.- Belt tension, If the belts are too tight the tooth patten may show up in the printed surface
- Motor accuracy. Motors have predefined "steps" which the microcontroller smoothes out. Try printing the part faster or slower, and see if that changes the surface regularity. If it does, then it means you might have a printing speed close to the motors resonant frequency
- If speed doesn't fix it, then it might be a bearing, either the motion system or the extruder.
In general on a 20T belt pulley, I find printers have 2 resonant speed frequencies, 60-80mm/s or 100-130mm/s. Try to find out which one your motor doesn't like, and avoid those speeds.
You also want to loosen your belts as much as possible without compromising your accuracy or risk belt slippage. its VERY easy to overtighten your belts if you don't have measurement equipment. -
@Notepad said in Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints:
you might have a printing speed close to the motors resonant frequency
Interesting stuff! In car gearboxes they often use gears with a prime number toothcount to avoid such stuff. There it's torque-curve related, which is similar to the stepper motor.
I wonder if the resonance frequencies would be an issue with 17 or 19 tooth pulleys?
I may resin-print some pulleys to test this theory. -
Cleaning the pulleys slightly improved that effect but did not solve it.
I am waiting for new pulleys that I will install along with a new belt but I don't think I am getting any improvement.I tried printing with a higher speed without getting any change.
I have tried printing at 45° with no change.
I tried printing with a 0.3 layer instead of 0.2 and got no change.
I tried redoing the PID of the bed and found no change.
By now it has become a war....me against her!
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@o_lampe
The engines I use on X and Y are these:
https://www.omc-stepperonline.com/it/nema-17-bipolare-0-9deg-46ncm-65-1oz-in-2a-2-8v-42x42x48mm-4-fili-lunghezza-d-cut-completa-17hm19-2004s1 -
@luc said in Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints:
I tried printing with a 0.3 layer instead of 0.2 and got no change.
This should at least change the distance between the lines?
Your motors are perfectly fine. What we discussed about resonance is a common thing among steppers.
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@o_lampe said in Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints:
@luc said in Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints:
I tried printing with a 0.3 layer instead of 0.2 and got no change.
This should at least change the distance between the lines?
Your motors are perfectly fine. What we discussed about resonance is a common thing among steppers.
No, almost nothing changes. Maybe very little for the better but the imprint of those vertical waves remains.
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@luc
To assess whether the motors are the cause, I might try setting a different current.
They are currently set at M906 1700.Are you thinking of trying a print at 1800 or 1600 or less?
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@o_lampe OO very interesting, I never considered the difference between 19 20 and 21 tooth. Id say start with 21 tooth as bigger pulley = more grip
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@luc Less current normally means less vibration force. If it works, Try 1200 or 1400
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Hello everyone,
I put on the new pulleys (even though the old ones were just to be cleaned) and with the occasion also the new belt and I can't get rid of those vertical marks that seem to be spaced just under 2mm apart.Does anyone have any ideas?
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@luc since the 2mm spacing suggests its related to tooth pitch flip the belt so the teeth aren't engaged, tension to provide enough grip to execute a test print.
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@Notepad In my theory, 20 teeth is the worst, since if syncs "perfectly" with the 200 steps/turn torque curve.
21 isn't a prime number, so I'd go for 19 or 23 -
I was able to find a way to turn the belt temporarily just to make a print.
The cause is not the belt or even the pulleys.
I'm beginning to think it may be the motors:
https://www.omc-stepperonline.com/it/nema-17-bipolare-0-9deg-46ncm-65-1oz-in-2a-2-8v-42x42x48mm-4-fili-lunghezza-d-cut-completa-17hm19-2004s1What are your thoughts on these motors?
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@luc The motors seem fine, but it might be an imbalance in how the coils have been wound. What hardware and firmware version are you running? Send M122 and post the response. Also please post your full config.g.
Ian
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@droftarts said in Very slight systematic waves every about 2mm on the prints:
@luc The motors seem fine, but it might be an imbalance in how the coils have been wound. What hardware and firmware version are you running? Send M122 and post the response. Also please post your full config.g.
Ian
Here is what is required
Thank you -
@luc I can't see anything obvious in your config or M122 that would be causing the issue. You could try using the latest 3.6.0-rc.2 firmware to see if it makes any difference, but I'd think the issue is either the motors as already discussed, or mechanical, ie a bad bearing on the belt run (if it affects all axes, look at the bearings not on the X carriage, as those don't move with Y axis movement). Overtightened belts can also cause issues. Finally, check that you haven't mixed up the belt and pulley types, ie running Gates GT2-2mm belts with 2GT pulleys, as the tooth profile is very slightly different.
Ian
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@droftarts
I don't think it could be the firmware but I'll try it last.All pulleys and bearings looked good but your point about doing it on all faces I could I had to check to rule out the fixed bearings not on X axis was very helpful in fact, since I had them new, I decided to change both bearings and pulleys.
I made a test print afterwards and did not solve it so I think it is useless to disassemble the other 4 X-axis bearings.
I only have one new motor in reserve. I don't know if it is worth doing a test by changing only one motor or is it better to do both together.
Edit
For GT2 or 2GT: With both old motor pulleys and belt and new ones I tried to see conme copied one over the other and I don't seem to have any doubts about that. They look okay to me.Edit2:
Changed the left engine: Nothing....all the same as before!