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    E3D Roto + Duet Roto Toolboard - Stepper motor stalling

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    • elmoretundefined
      elmoret @jay_s_uk
      last edited by

      @jay_s_uk said in E3D Roto + Duet Roto Toolboard - Stepper motor stalling:

      @arturolaz there is this as well about the Roto itself
      c2fbc9fe-0a2a-4b40-9181-fbdfa703cd27-image.png

      That's a PLA limit, to avoid jams in the hotend.

      Notepadundefined arturolazundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Notepadundefined
        Notepad @elmoret
        last edited by

        @elmoret Can confirm, E3D testing is always a "worst case" recommendation. The max motor amperage is only if they are pushing ultra high flow high pressure, in a 50+C heated chamber, for extreme lengths of time.
        You may want to raise your amperage as that would give you more force available.

        The real bamboo printer manufacturer

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        • arturolazundefined
          arturolaz @elmoret
          last edited by

          @elmoret This problem started while printing ABS but I have since reverted to testing with PLA with the same results, the motor keeps stalling after 15-20 minutes of printing when coming from a cold start and sooner on later prints.

          @Notepad I have also tested with the absolute max current E3D recomends, 0.6A peak with the same result, I think anything beyond that might risk damaging the coils.

          I will open a case with E3D to be sure the motor is not damaged at this point.

          infiniteloopundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • infiniteloopundefined
            infiniteloop @arturolaz
            last edited by

            @arturolaz

            the motor keeps stalling after 15-20 minutes of printing when coming from a cold start and sooner on later prints.

            Looks like a classical heat creep. Initially, this might have happened at high temperatures when printing ABS. Then, with PLA, remainders of the ABS can partially block the filament path so that the melt zone expands upwards…

            Have fought with that before, cleaning the filament path had only a temporary effect. In the end, I had to swap both the nozzle and heat barrier. Finally, I improved the cooling (of the cold end of my hot end 😉), which was the root cause of my problem.

            arturolazundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • arturolazundefined
              arturolaz @infiniteloop
              last edited by

              @infiniteloop I hadn't thought of that, I will try a fresh nozzle and upgrade the fan, thanks for the suggestion

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              • arturolazundefined
                arturolaz
                last edited by

                @infiniteloop I managed to try a fresh 0.4 nozzle and replaced the original extruder cooling fan with an slightly bigger one, still not working.

                Also, I saw on the TMC2240 datasheet that Spreadcycle can compensate to some degree for the back EMF coming from the stepper, switched to that mode but didn't work as well

                More ideas are appreciated before I take the leap and go for an smart orbiter.

                infiniteloopundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Phaedruxundefined
                  Phaedrux Moderator
                  last edited by

                  Can you share some photos of the extruder setup to help with context?

                  Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

                  arturolazundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • arturolazundefined
                    arturolaz @Phaedrux
                    last edited by

                    @Phaedrux For sure
                    1.jpeg 2.jpeg 3.jpeg 4.jpeg

                    elmoretundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • elmoretundefined
                      elmoret @arturolaz
                      last edited by

                      No sock on the nozzle?

                      How are you cooling the Roto's heatsink? Looks quite boxed in there.

                      arturolazundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • arturolazundefined
                        arturolaz @elmoret
                        last edited by

                        @elmoret this particular nozzle didn't have a sock. The heatsink fan can be seen in the third picture from top to bottom

                        elmoretundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • infiniteloopundefined
                          infiniteloop @arturolaz
                          last edited by

                          @arturolaz

                          I managed to try a fresh 0.4 nozzle and replaced the original extruder cooling fan with an slightly bigger one, still not working.

                          So you didn’t touch the heat break? From you photos, I cant’t get a clue. Could you describe the setup? I mean, is it all-metal, has it a PTFE tube all down to the nozzle …

                          arturolazundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • elmoretundefined
                            elmoret @arturolaz
                            last edited by

                            @arturolaz All genuine E3D nozzles have socks. And yes, I can see the fan, I can also see that the area around the heatsink, that the exhaust air would be flowing through, is pretty blocked.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • arturolazundefined
                              arturolaz @infiniteloop
                              last edited by

                              @infiniteloop No, I didn’t touch the heatbreak as this is a Revo nozzle there is no PTFE tube inside just the nozzle tightened all the way in into the Roto extruder. The PTFE tube coming from the top barely gets inside the assembly without reaching the hobbed gears.

                              @elmoret it is a nozzle from the early beta testing of the revo system when those were shipped without sock, so, for your point, it is genuine. There is no air path blocked aside from the front where the toolboard is supposed to be installed and the back for the mounting system, did you mean that?

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