Duet3D Logo Duet3D
    • Tags
    • Documentation
    • Order
    • Register
    • Login

    Movement is stuttering. Appears to slow printing down

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved
    Tuning and tweaking
    7
    46
    5.7k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Asdasd1234undefined
      Asdasd1234 @dc42
      last edited by

      @dc42 said in Movement is stuttering. Appears to slow printing down:

      I'll review the code when I am back in the office.

      Hi,

      Did anything come of this in the end? And would increasing the microstepping on my extruder give me a higher upper-speed-limit before hitting this issue since it seems linked to the distance of a single step?
      Printing at high speed without pressure advance adds way to much inaccuracy to tolerances for me print without it. I feel like I'm missing out on printing at double the speed at the moment 😞

      Many thanks

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

        It's still on my list for review before I release 2.02RC4. i think there is probably an issue with the code, but whether it is connected with extruder movements less than one microstep, I can't yet say. The code does make allowances for extruding moves sometimes resulting in no actual extruder movement, but I am not sure it allows for that everywhere it needs to.

        Meanwhile, I suggest you try increasing extruder microstepping. The only downside is that if you increase it too much, the retraction speed that can be achieved may be reduced.

        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
        • Asdasd1234undefined
          Asdasd1234
          last edited by Asdasd1234

          No problem, I've been experimenting yesterday with increasing the microstepping and sticking a larger nema17 motor on my extruder to provide the extra torque for the time being, and I've lucked out finding a setting that's quite a bit faster, and although it still stutters like mad, it at least does the outer wall without stuttering on this particular print, so that'll keep me occupied for now 🙂

          Many thanks

          nopheadundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • nopheadundefined
            nophead @Asdasd1234
            last edited by

            @asdasd1234 Do you have control over the number of line segments in the STL file? I have noticed with Cura it will generate ridiculously short segments if the model has them. As I model in OpenSCAD I can simply set $fs to half my extrusion width and then I don't get any segments shorter than 0.25mm. There really isn't any point in printing shorter segments. Skeinforge combines segments that are too small, not sure about other slicers.

            burtoogleundefined Asdasd1234undefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • burtoogleundefined
              burtoogle @nophead
              last edited by

              @nophead said in Movement is stuttering. Appears to slow printing down:

              @asdasd1234 Do you have control over the number of line segments in the STL file? I have noticed with Cura it will generate ridiculously short segments if the model has them. As I model in OpenSCAD I can simply set $fs to half my extrusion width and then I don't get any segments shorter than 0.25mm. There really isn't any point in printing shorter segments. Skeinforge combines segments that are too small, not sure about other slicers.

              I have looked at the line segments being produced by Cura for the model discussed above and what is happening is that the outer wall does not contain short line segments but the inner wall does. The inner wall is created from the outer wall by using a clipper library routine. It is that routine that is creating the short line segments. It's really beyond my capabilities to be fixing something like that so I can't really help there, sorry.

              Cura does provide a setting that specifies a resolution for the original model but that is not applied to the inner walls. I tried doing that and the results were not satisfactory. More work required.

              However, I am waiting with interest to see if David can make any changes that help RRF cope with short line segments when pressure advance is in use.

              nopheadundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • nopheadundefined
                nophead @burtoogle
                last edited by

                @burtoogle Interesting. It is probably a bug in the way Cura is using clipper as offsetting inwards shouldn't generate more line segments in a circle. I never print with more than one wall so I hadn't noticed this.

                burtoogleundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • burtoogleundefined
                  burtoogle @nophead
                  last edited by

                  @nophead , I'll take another look in case I can find any obvious problem...

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Asdasd1234undefined
                    Asdasd1234 @nophead
                    last edited by

                    @nophead said in Movement is stuttering. Appears to slow printing down:

                    @asdasd1234 Do you have control over the number of line segments in the STL file? I have noticed with Cura it will generate ridiculously short segments if the model has them. As I model in OpenSCAD I can simply set $fs to half my extrusion width and then I don't get any segments shorter than 0.25mm. There really isn't any point in printing shorter segments. Skeinforge combines segments that are too small, not sure about other slicers.

                    Not that I'm aware of. I use fusion 360 for all my parts. The options I get are on this link (https://i.imgur.com/iWAnnjO.png) . All the refinement option does is change the normal/surface deviations.

                    burtoogleundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • burtoogleundefined
                      burtoogle @Asdasd1234
                      last edited by

                      @asdasd1234 , I have delved into Cura some more and now I think that the problem is actually being caused by the buggy wall overlap compensation and not the clipper lib. So, a simple change for you to try would be to disable the overlap compensation and see what happens. I actually use a modified version of that code because the original is so buggy but it still has problems so it doesn't surprise me that it is generating the spurious short line segments.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • burtoogleundefined
                        burtoogle
                        last edited by

                        I am homing in on the bug(s) but do not yet have a fix.

                        Another workaround is to set the line width to 0.39 and set fill gaps between walls to nowhere.

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

                          I've just tested the firmware using this script:

                          G10 P0 S200
                          M116
                          G1 X-20 Y0 Z50 F6000
                          ; start extruding
                          g1 x0 e1 f3000
                          g1 x2 e0.1
                          g1 x22 e1
                          g1 x22.2 e0.01
                          g1 x42.2 e1
                          g1 x42.22 e0.001
                          g1 x62.22 e1
                          g1 x62.24 e0.001
                          g1 x82.24 e1
                          g1 x82.242 e0.0001
                          g1 102.242 e1
                          

                          The moves are all designed to have constant extrusion rate from one to the next. Running this test I get no stuttering, with pressure advance set to 0.2 or 0.4.

                          If I am to attempt a fix in firmware then I need an example of a gcode sequence that causes the stuttering. Preferably, also an analysis (perhaps on a spreadsheet) of:

                          • What the extrusion rate is for each segment;
                          • What the movement direction is for each segment

                          Has it been established yet whether the problem still occurs with zero pressure advance?

                          PS - the post by @burtoogle 3 Nov 2018, 13:27 includes an image that shows an example, but I can't copy and paste from that.

                          PPS adding 0.1mm of Y movement to the 20mm long moves makes no difference, still no stuttering.

                          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
                          • Asdasd1234undefined
                            Asdasd1234
                            last edited by Asdasd1234

                            I'll run a print today without the pressure advance and let you know if still stuttering and will supply the gcode file, thanks

                            EDIT: Will have to be tomorrow now, I'm out in a bit and wont have time.

                            EDIT: Ran out of time again, hopefully get some gcode examples up today (12th)

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • burtoogleundefined
                              burtoogle
                              last edited by

                              I've submitted a small fix to the Cura devs that stops the small line segments being created when you have curved walls lying immediately adjacent to each other and the overlap compensation is enabled. It should fix the project discussed above but doesn't really tackle the underlying problems that the overlap compensation has. Fixes are currently taking many months to get merged into Cura (assuming it is accepted) so don't expect the official releases to have this anytime soon. The next development version that I release will have this fix in it. See https://www.dropbox.com/sh/s43vqzmi4d2bqe2/AAADdYdSu9iwcKa0Knqgurm4a?dl=0

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                              • First post
                                Last post
                              Unless otherwise noted, all forum content is licensed under CC-BY-SA