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    Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor

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    Filament Monitor
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    • 3dmntbighkerundefined
      3dmntbighker @brunofporto
      last edited by 3dmntbighker

      @brunofporto Thanks, I'm starting with your design on my Ender 3 printed with eSun black PLA. I think you need a bit more surface area "bite" on the tubing.

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

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • insertnamehereundefined
        insertnamehere
        last edited by insertnamehere

        @t3p3tony, @dc42
        The last 2 days I've been printing with eSUN black PLA, not the PETG I've been having problems with but a filament that has worked ok.

        I have been getting value like:
        minimum 83%, average 95%, maximum 112% mostly, I thought the sensor was working ok with this filament.

        Then today I tried a print and the print paused twice with "Extruder 0 reports too little movement".

        I ran a M591 D0 I now get this and now it is
        minimum 46%, average 71%, maximum 93%
        with the same roll of black PLA

        Why so inconsistent?
        Do I have a faulty sensor?

        It doesn't work with some filaments and when it does it gives inconsistent result.

        Did you have these problems in testing?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • insertnamehereundefined
          insertnamehere
          last edited by insertnamehere

          @insertnamehere said in Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor:

          @t3p3tony, @dc42

          look, I'm a customer who is having problems with your product. I've been asking questions to help me determine if I have a faulty device. Two previous posts of mine have gone unanswered.

          I would like to know if the inconsistent readings for the same filament over time (as much as 50% variability) were common in beta testing or if you think the sensor is faulty?

          What do the the min, max and average percentages represent, and what values (I get some negative percentages) are unusable for sensing movement?

          I get a lot of false detection even with quite wide M591 Raa:bb values. Was this seen in testing?

          What should I do RMA for a replacement or get a refund?

          wilrikerundefined hayseed_byteundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators
            last edited by

            How did you mount the filament monitor? Might dust have go on to the image sensor, reducing its sensitivity? The instructions on our wiki advise against mounting it with the image sensor facing upwards, to guard against dust building up on it.

            Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
            Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
            http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

            insertnamehereundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • wilrikerundefined
              wilriker @insertnamehere
              last edited by

              @insertnamehere said in Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor:

              What do the the min, max and average percentages represent

              This one I can answer: these are statistical values representing the movement seen by the sensor vs. movement commanded by the firmware.

              Example: minimum 83%, average 95%, maximum 112%
              This means that on average the sensor saw 95% of movement distance that was commanded by the firmware. In case this would be totally accurate it means on average there would be 5% under-extrusion.
              Minimum represents the lowest value seen compared to commanded movement and maximum of course the opposite.

              Negative values mean that the sensor saw a movement in reversed direction compared to what the firmware commanded. As an (arbitrary) example, the sensor saw forward movement where the firmware commanded a retraction.

              Regarding the (possibly) inconsistent performance of the sensor with a filament working good previously: I had this issue twice in beta test where it paused due to too little movement - but in both cases when examining the print it turned out that the sensor was right and the print actually was under-extruded. So have you checked this particular print for signs of under-extrusion? Unfortunately, they might be hidden i.e. restricted to the infill portion of the print.

              Manuel
              Duet 3 6HC (v0.6) with RPi 4B on a custom Cartesian
              with probably always latest firmware/DWC (incl. betas or self-compiled)
              My Tool Collection

              brunofportoundefined insertnamehereundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • brunofportoundefined
                brunofporto @wilriker
                last edited by

                @wilriker The average is of good help for tunning extrusion. The blue ABS is perfected when tunned to 100% average.

                But that is why I would like to have data from the entire print! Just Max and Min is a bad reference for decision or evaluate. A graphic view of the measurement versus gcode command over time would show events cristal clear.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • insertnamehereundefined
                  insertnamehere @wilriker
                  last edited by

                  @wilriker Thanks for the explanation.

                  I have 3 filaments that regularly give negative minimum percentages. I've also seen black PETG give a negative average percentage. I just wonder how effective a filament sensor is that gets the direction wrong on movement?

                  Does that make sense at all?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • insertnamehereundefined
                    insertnamehere @dc42
                    last edited by insertnamehere

                    @dc42 said in Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor:

                    How did you mount the filament monitor? Might dust have go on to the image sensor, reducing its sensitivity? The instructions on our wiki advise against mounting it with the image sensor facing upwards, to guard against dust building up on it.

                    Thanks for the reply.

                    I've used 2 different mounts and currently using your the reference mount design. The sensor is mounted vertically, looking down. Checked for dust, nothing I can see.

                    I'm seeing wide variations of movement detected with some filaments showing negative values. Even the same filament on different days gives a huge difference in result.

                    I'm using a Bondtech BMG and I tried it with maximum tension on the filament. That extruder would literally pull the reel off the stand before slipping. I see no sign of under-extrusion on several 20mm test cubes printed during this process.

                    To me the sensor is either faulty or the design isn't reliable.

                    There are many things that you have to cope with and adjust for when printing, the filament sensor should not be one of them.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • insertnamehereundefined
                      insertnamehere @dc42
                      last edited by

                      @dc42

                      Well I found the likely cause. Clearly I have a faulty sensor.
                      This is an image showing the sensor through the mount aperture.

                      0_1541813613408_IMG_1628.JPG

                      I don't know how this happened. I took great care in handling and mounting. It's been checked several times for dust and I certainly didn't see it.

                      My best guess is that because the reference mount design uses the mounting screws through the pcb to also provide tension on the bowden tube to clamp it tight, this tension cause the pcb to flex and cracked the sensor.

                      Clearly it could also be my fault, so I'll just forget about it.
                      Thanks for your help.

                      T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • T3P3Tonyundefined
                        T3P3Tony administrators @insertnamehere
                        last edited by

                        @insertnamehere please can you submit a warranty claim:
                        https://www.duet3d.com/Warranty

                        Reference this forum post in the comments.
                        Thanks for your patience.

                        www.duet3d.com

                        dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • dc42undefined
                          dc42 administrators @T3P3Tony
                          last edited by dc42

                          @insertnamehere, in addition to submit a warranty claim, please can you:

                          1. Check the printed parts that the filament monitor PCB fits between, to make sure that the surfaces that mate with the PCB are flat, and there are no blobs or other blemishes that might stress the PCB when the screws are tightened.

                          2. Tell us what material you printed them in.

                          I have just added a note in the fitting instructions to advise looking for blobs that might stress the PCB. It may be that we also need to increase the thickness of the lower printed part, perhaps depending on what material it is printed with.

                          Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                          Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                          http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                          insertnamehereundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • insertnamehereundefined
                            insertnamehere @dc42
                            last edited by

                            @dc42

                            I couldn't see any blobs or contamination on the surface.
                            0_1541902806319_IMG_1629.jpg

                            I used eSun PLA+ with 100% infill.

                            Honestly, I took all care, but I can't be sure it wasn't something I did that damaged the sensor. Are you sure you want me to claim warranty?

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • dc42undefined
                              dc42 administrators
                              last edited by

                              We don't know whether the cracked sensor is our fault because of a manufacturing defect or because we didn't make the printed part thicker in our housing design, or something you did. In these cases we give the customer the benefit of the doubt. So please make a warranty claim.

                              Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                              Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                              http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • insertnamehereundefined
                                insertnamehere
                                last edited by

                                @dc42
                                Thanks you.

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

                                  Printing with eSun olive green PLA tonight. Pretty crap numbers.

                                  Duet3D laser filament monitor on endstop input 3, disabled, allowed movement 40% to 120%, check every 3.0mm, current position -7.3, brightness 91, shutter 17, measured minimum 27%, average 81%, maximum 204% over 4232.4mm

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

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

                                    Back to eSun yellow PETG, and my average was 84%. My minimum was -1%.

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

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ShawnCundefined
                                      ShawnC
                                      last edited by

                                      Regarding the filament monitor, can we use Prusa MK3 filament sensor as well? Can it be connected to E0 end stop?

                                      T3P3Tonyundefined dc42undefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • T3P3Tonyundefined
                                        T3P3Tony administrators @ShawnC
                                        last edited by

                                        @shawnc said in Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor [SOLVED]:

                                        Regarding the filament monitor, can we use Prusa MK3 filament sensor as well? Can it be connected to E0 end stop?

                                        No it cannot be used because it does not have the control circuitry on it.

                                        www.duet3d.com

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • dc42undefined
                                          dc42 administrators @ShawnC
                                          last edited by dc42

                                          @shawnc said in Problems with new Laser Filament Monitor [SOLVED]:

                                          Regarding the filament monitor, can we use Prusa MK3 filament sensor as well? Can it be connected to E0 end stop?

                                          No. The Prusa filament monitor uses a raw I2C interface to communicate between the sensor and the processor (and it's level shifted to 5V). We rejected that approach because I2C is a bad choice for connecting devices over more than a few cm, because of its poor noise immunity, the lack of any error detection, and the difficulty of recovering from I2C protocol errors. It may be possible to get it working reliably enough in a closely controlled system like a genuine Prusa i3, but it would be a support nightmare if used more widely, e.g. in home-build printers.

                                          Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                          Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                          http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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

                                            Solutech clear green PETG

                                            Duet3D laser filament monitor on endstop input 3, disabled, allowed movement 40% to 120%, check every 3.0mm, current position -1.7, brightness 107, shutter 17, measured minimum 31%, average 79%, maximum 97% over 17533.6mm

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

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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