Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?
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@redemptioner said in Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?:
Well there is nothing stopping you printing via the Duet web interface when not using the the pallet 2.
This is precisely what I'm thinking - use the Pallet for multi-whatever jobs, but swap bowden tubes over to my original extruder for single filament jobs if needed/desired.
My delta has an ethernet Duet, as I'm not a fan of wifi at all, or streaming via USB. However, the Octoprint worked well for me before I bought the Duet.
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but:
- all Palette models, including the 2 & 2 Pro, can operate without a Hub/ Pi interface
- the Hub gives
a) an Octoprint connection
b) allows for better extrusion syncing - If I already have a Pi, I can use it to get the identical connectivity/benefits that the Hub offers
Are these correct?
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@plasticmetal said in Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?:
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but:
- all Palette models, including the 2 & 2 Pro, can operate without a Hub/ Pi interface
- the Hub gives
a) an Octoprint connection
b) allows for better extrusion syncing - If I already have a Pi, I can use it to get the identical connectivity/benefits that the Hub offers
Are these correct?
2 and 3 are correct. Basically if you have a Pi you can use it. If you don't have one and not willing to buy one (out of whatever reason) you can use the Hub instead.
I don't know enough about 1 to answer that. -
@3dmntbighker said in Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?:
ne way or another you need a USB connection from Palette2 or Pi. I'm not really a fan of depending on USB for expensive multi-day print jobs. I fully understand why they went this way. For the Pro I believe they will eventually need the ability to have all communication over wired ethernet, or something equally robust.
I am also interested in the Palette 2, but I have to say... the current prints they have showcased; in particular the.... weird multicolored t-rex skull, have me somewhat confused; it all just seems very random. Maybe that was the idea? The active mechanism they have devised for mixing seems like it would work; but... now, I also base this back on the Video that was posted of the Palette2 in use. I was counting for the color to visibly fade between the next; instead it seems to be 'purged' from within somehow in the video as the colors shift immediately.
I have to echo what @3dmntbighker is saying here... and maybe add a little bit. The most concerning thing I see here is the wifi integration; that is a weak point unless it is devised to work in a way in which it delivers the necessary data in a chunk and then utilizes it locally -- if this is for syncing or for any sort of gcode stream/buffer, I would wait for a version with an Ethernet or USB connection. As far as working with the Duet? As @T3P3Tony has indicated, the video from Joel should answer most all of your questions. A good measure of the chance of this becoming problematic, for me, would be this: is the rasberry pi a zero, or a zero w? If it's a zero, you're in the clearo.... if it's not, your gcode is.... okay I give up. Also, to echo Tony a bit
There are already solutions out there that could have easily chained the palette together with any printer... especially with a Duet board supporting it. I don't know what to make of that part in particular... Based on my experience with the Palette+, it's a very unique system. I think it has a lot of potential; however, I'm not sure if the same kind of person that would build a printer with a Duet at its heart would find much use in this. Don't let me discourage you however! Color mixing/material mixing is what many of us are laser focused on right now, and I am of the opinion that any product and associated user experiences can help us get closer to that goal.
One more note @Redemptioner -- I am not sure which Duet version you're utilizing, but, I think you will find that DWC is a lot more reliable and faster than OctoPrint running on a Raspberry Pi when plugged in via Ethernet on any recent board. I am a recent convert to the realm of Duet boards after having previously developed firmware that was for use solely through OctoPrint(That was the Delivery Method chosen for Klipper initially, and still remains the most common implementation.)... and while I will always use OctoPrint, a Duet 2 running DWC is an amazingly fast experience for me.
In conclusion: I'm sure you can make it work, you shouldn't buy it anyway(but you really should), and I will be happy to gather any data you're willing to supply in terms of attempting to mix other filaments. This goes toward a larger effort that we are currently looking at: making a publicly accessible and curated filament database. No matter how we choose to go forward with color/material mixing, it's not an easy problem to solve and I believe as many companies attempt this, the better. Now, get ready to help us solve the real problem -- intuitive color slicing with same-layer color shifts!
Thanks,
David
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@streamliner said in Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?:
The active mechanism they have devised for mixing seems like it would work; but
There's no active mixing, or any ability to mix at all with the Palette -- it just snips and fuses filament. Its completely binary, all of one of the four input filaments.
You need a mixing hotend like a Diamond to get any blending at all.
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@dotorg Interesting -- I simply watched the Palette 2 promotional video and it seemed to give me a different impression. I am actually curating the Crane Line of 3d Printers from M3D, including the Crane Quad; it utilizes our QuadFusion Mixing Head and we offer a variety of color patched CMYK(process color) filaments. We've been able to produce around 55,000 colors so far... this is driven by a Duet Maestro with a 2-stepper expansion. That said, I have a particular interest in mixing... but from what you've said, and from the prints I've seen... now it just seems like the Palette 2 is a more sleek version of the Prusa MMU.
Cheers,
David
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@streamliner said in Palette 2 / Canvas Hub Announcement -- Duet compatible?:
...................... now it just seems like the Palette 2 is a more sleek version of the Prusa MMU.Indeed. That is exactly what it is.
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@deckingman Yep! How are you doing Ian? We've been insanely busy preparing for the Crane launch... it has pulled me away from the Quad for a bit unfortunately, but, it will soon be back in focus. Things are going really well otherwise. We had a very, very interesting brainstorming session on active mixing last night... I will have to email the details to you.
I have the community refocused a bit to pick up on the 3MF standard, as it seems AMF has splintered and come nearly non-existent. On the other hand, the 3MF standard has been picked up by some very large companies that have put some very big promises behind it. I have to say in this occasion, in order to move past STL we do need some type of consortium/entity to truly take this to the next level.
Cheers
David@M3D
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I talked to Mosaic support and they confirmed it works with a Duet:
βYes, it will work with a Duet, and you have the option of connecting Palette 2 to the printer via USB using the CANVAS Hub, or you can simplify load the files to your printer's SD card, similar to how it's done with a Palette+.β
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@streamliner Yeah I'm fine. Working on some ideas of my own - nothing that would impinge on what you guys are trying to do with the quad. Don't forget, I'm happy to help if I can but unless you talk to me and /or share information, there's nothing I can do.
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I've got a question or two comparing the Palette 2 with the Crane Quad head.
Distinct switching from one extruder to another (color or material) is generally going to be the rule for me. Both systems have to be actively purged for this to happen. Is there a difference between the two in their abilities to do this?
Filament waste due to purging when switching is unavoidable, unless a transition is allowable or desired. Easy software control of this purge is highly desirable; it would be great to use as infill, but some of my products will be thin-walled with minimal infill. I realize the slicer is key to making this happen, but broadly, is either system better than the other for minimizing the purge volume?
I like the versatility of the E3D interchangeable tool head system, priced (for mechanism only, no hot-ends) between the Crane head and Palette 2. Clearly a benefit of it is no purge waste at all. None of these are currently shipping.
I can buy an entire Crane printer, with Quad head, for less than the Palette 2 Pro, even though it's print area is fairly small. My thoughts would be to use it as is while figuring it out, while building/buying a larger printer, and then just move the Quad head later.
Thoughts?
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@plasticmetal You could also throw the Prometheus system into the mix.
Purging can be done a number of ways. I use 3 different techniques with my Diamond mixing hot end depending on the model I'm printing. If the colour change occurs on layer change, then you can often get away with no purge simply but printing inner perimeters before outer ones. If it's a small model or the colour change happens within the same layer, then it is necessary to extrude some filament. Most systems print a sacrificial tower of some sort but this is often wasteful as the tower has to be printer on every layer change, even if there is no colour change. I prefer to move the head outside the bed and simply extrude into a "bucket" which is less wasteful (in terms of time as well as filament). details here https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/2017/12/06/5-colour-printing-with-a-purge-bucket/
The final approach I use is to advance the tool change point with the gcode file so effectively the filament is changed before it is needed. The easiest way to explain that is to point you to this part of my blog https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/2017/01/06/multi-colour-printing-without-wipe-or-prime-towers/