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    Dude about precision piezo

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    • peirofundefined
      peirof
      last edited by

      Hi,

      I have ordered a Precision Piezo. .. And have a doub...
      How does it work? If I have not misunderstood, piezo precision is supposed to detect the bed when the nozzle is very close to the this. ... But ... How does Precision Piezo know ... That the nozzle is rubbing the bed? I have looked at the design of the adapter ... And I do not see Precision Piezo in contact with the extruder.

      T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • 3dmntbighkerundefined
        3dmntbighker
        last edited by

        The nozzle bangs into the bed and the piezo produces a signal. I think the idea is good and bad. The nozzle has to be hot or at least free of stray material. In some ways it's an accident waiting to happen, but it has real advantages. The design of the carriage and it's durability, as well as the type of bed surface are factors. My fairly thick PEI over a MIC6 aluminum plate is very rugged so a piezo would probably work pretty well. The guy who designed my coreXY hates the idea of course. He says build it so stable you calibrate once and leave it. I would like the option to use a bit of mesh compensation though personally. I still have every intention of trying the piezo on mine. The latest iteration of that sensor no longer uses a piezo disc with a hole crudely drilled in the middle. They switched to a breadboard with flexy bits and smaller piezo discs. Looks like a massive improvement to me. I would prefer they stopped using 3D printed parts though and switched to something better.

        Scratch built CoreXY with Maestro
        Heavily modified Ender 3 with Maestro
        MPCNC work in progress with Duet WiFi

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        • T3P3Tonyundefined
          T3P3Tony administrators @peirof
          last edited by

          @peirof the sligt Z movement of the hotend in the mount when the nozzle touches the bed distorts the piezo disk, which is converted into a signal the duet understands ans a Z probe trigger. @DjDemonD can explain in more detail.

          www.duet3d.com

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          • Craigundefined
            Craig
            last edited by

            I use my Piezo to accurately locate my Z axis instead of an endstop.

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            • whosrdaddyundefined
              whosrdaddy
              last edited by

              Happy user here, 3 machines p.piezo powered, I do not use the printed mount but carriage mount and underbed mount and they never let me down...

              boldnutsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • boldnutsundefined
                boldnuts @whosrdaddy
                last edited by

                @whosrdaddy said in Dude about precision piezo:

                Happy user here, 3 machines p.piezo powered, I do not use the printed mount but carriage mount and underbed mount and they never let me down...

                Could you please elaborate on carriage and under bed mounting, as I am interested in this option

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                • whosrdaddyundefined
                  whosrdaddy
                  last edited by whosrdaddy

                  Depends on the printer you have.

                  On my i3 clone, I use this: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2705784

                  On my CoreXY, I use underbed sensors with "noise canceling" piezos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgcDk_8NACc
                  Gantry is powered by Z axis. The piezos are stuffed in TPU feet under the bed 's corners.

                  Like I said, it all depends on the type of printer you have...

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                  • DjDemonDundefined
                    DjDemonD
                    last edited by DjDemonD

                    Hi yes, so its all on our website www.precisionpiezo.co.uk and on our reprap thread https://reprap.org/forum/read.php?1,767998 it a fully open source project so its not a secret.

                    If you connect a piezo disc to an arduino and ask it to monitor the voltage on an analogue pin, you will see that they are incredibly sensitive, any slight vibration or certainly any deformation of the disc will generate a large voltage. Hit one with a hammer and you'll see 50v! (don't do this with your 5v arduino analogue pin please). This is how electronic lighters work, by striking a piezo hard and generating an arc.

                    In the hotend sensor systems, the piezo disc is deformed when the nozzle contacts the bed. It only needs to be around 0.1m (which is repeatable so you can set this as a z offset) to give a signal, and can be very gentle when correctly tuned.

                    There is no electrical contact between the Precision Piezo sensor and the hotend, this would be very undesirable as a short or wiring failure would create damage to Piezo PCB or 3d printer controller board.

                    Simon. Precision Piezo Z-Probe Technology
                    www.precisionpiezo.co.uk
                    PT1000 cartridge sensors NOW IN, just attach to your Duet board directly!

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                    • boldnutsundefined
                      boldnuts
                      last edited by

                      I am currently using a Bltouch after not having much luck with the IR probe, but cant see how I would attach the piezo to my P3 Steel, under the bed? as I use metal x axis end's and carriage.

                      whosrdaddyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • whosrdaddyundefined
                        whosrdaddy @boldnuts
                        last edited by whosrdaddy

                        @boldnuts I use a carriage mount solution for my P3Steel see my thingiverse link I posted earlier...

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