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    Z motors wont move together

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    • dc42undefined
      dc42 administrators @nophead
      last edited by dc42

      @nophead said in Z motors wont move together:

      It is actually behaving like one of the sockets is shorted. The motor plugged into that one would not spin but the other would.

      I agree. Check that there are no solder bridges between pins of the Z motor connectors on the underside of the Duet. I recall seeing a report of a board with this fault recently. It didn't get picked up during testing because the boards are tested with the 2 jumpers in the Zb position, just as they are shipped.

      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

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      • Xandrelundefined
        Xandrel @nophead
        last edited by

        @nophead said in Z motors wont move together:

        It is actually behaving like one of the sockets is shorted. The motor plugged into that one would not spin but the other would.

        @dc42 said in Z motors wont move together:

        I agree. Check that there are no solder bridges between pins of the Z motor connectors on the underside of the Duet. I recall seeing a report of a board with this fault recently. It didn't get picked up during testing because the boards are tested with the 2 jumpers in the Zb position, just as they are shipped.

        I took a quick look at the board this morning, front to back, and cant see anything visual. I inspected the motor wires and connectors and cant see anything wrong. I trust the next step would be to check the pin headers with a meter for shorts?

        Should I be running the motors off their own driver anyways at this point? There seem to be more benefits that way anyway?

        dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • jckrayundefined
          jckray
          last edited by

          I have been having a slightly different issue with my z motors, but perhaps it could be related so I'll post here too.

          I have had many a successful print of the printer I built, however sometimes at the end of a print, or after a print has finished and upon starting up a new print, the z-axis motors decide to move out of sync. This seems very weird to me. As I understand it, this should not be possible since both motors are run from the same driver. I have had this issue across 3 different models of the printer shown in this video. All using the Duet Wifi, and two .4A steppers with integrated lead screws fro the z axis. The hardware and duet configuration is identical across all 3 printers. Power cycling the printer always resolves the issue.

          Perhaps the motors are been driven too fast? I know the z motors are in series so this greatly reduces torque over a certain speed.

          Another thought I had was maybe this has something to do with how RRF handles idle currents.

          I also have a single motor with the same specs as the z motor running of another driver on the board, which is used for a multilateral system. I have had no issues with this motor at all.

          [0_1541572296923_IMG_1315.MOV](Uploading 100%)

          John
          Founder of Hydra Research LLC, developers of the open-source 3D printers and providers of 3D printing services.
          https://www.hydraresearch3d.com/

          jckrayundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • jckrayundefined
            jckray @jckray
            last edited by

            @jckray Video link

            I realized I shared that video for my earlier post incorrectly. This link should work.

            John
            Founder of Hydra Research LLC, developers of the open-source 3D printers and providers of 3D printing services.
            https://www.hydraresearch3d.com/

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            • dc42undefined
              dc42 administrators @Xandrel
              last edited by dc42

              @xandrel said in Z motors wont move together:

              Should I be running the motors off their own driver anyways at this point? There seem to be more benefits that way anyway?

              As they are large motors (Nema 23), I would recommend that. But they should work in series if you don't ask for high Z speeds.

              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

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              • Xandrelundefined
                Xandrel
                last edited by

                Just to confirm, I did finally get back to looking at this issue and have temporarily solved it. I made a splicer so that I could put both Z motors into the same socket on the Duet, and it worked. This leads me to believe that the problem is a hardware issue on the Duet itself? Would you agree?

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

                  @xandrel Does your splice put the coils in series or parallel?

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                  • Xandrelundefined
                    Xandrel
                    last edited by

                    @elmoret It would be parallel.

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                    • dc42undefined
                      dc42 administrators
                      last edited by dc42

                      I suspect you were trying to run them too fast for a series connection. Now that you have them connected in parallel, they will receive half the current each, so the torque provided by each motor will be halved.

                      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

                      Xandrelundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Xandrelundefined
                        Xandrel @dc42
                        last edited by

                        @dc42 I would imagine for the z motors, speed and torque is not much of an issue as its only raising and lowering the printing gantry at a slow speed. The only fast movements it would do is during probing. Perhaps I am missing something? Either way, continuing with the project in this capacity is perfectly fine for me.

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