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    LED Strips - illumination

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    Duet Hardware and wiring
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    • T3P3Tonyundefined
      T3P3Tony administrators
      last edited by

      Many ATX supplies need to load the 3.3V and 5V lines sufficiently to prevent droop on the 12V as load increases. This is why the Mendel90 printer came with dummy load resistors for the power supply 5V and 3.3V lines. Long discussion here :
      http://forums.reprap.org/read.php?1,173287

      www.duet3d.com

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      • SimonRaffertyundefined
        SimonRafferty
        last edited by

        Thanks Guys.

        My bed is mains operated, through a SSR and the PSU will source sufficient current for the voltage to stay within 100mV of target (24v). I just have two equal strips of 12v LEDs connected in series. They seem to work pretty well connected to a fan output.

        Si

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        • T3P3Tonyundefined
          T3P3Tony administrators
          last edited by

          bright!

          www.duet3d.com

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          • DjDemonDundefined
            DjDemonD
            last edited by

            Simon you have a leadscrew driven delta? Tell us more….

            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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            • SimonRaffertyundefined
              SimonRafferty
              last edited by

              Simon you have a leadscrew driven delta? Tell us more….

              As an experiment, I attached a hot end to my Bridgeport CNC Mill - and was rather pleased with the results! It suffered from none of the motion artifacts I could see on my Ultimaker running at about the same speed.

              I thought a further experiment would be worthwhile, making a far more rigid printer than is common. The printer above is all made from 3mm folded mild steel and uses OpenBuilds linear actuators as the towers

              These were chosen as a reasonable compromise between cost & rigidity. They are not bad - you can adjust out all the backlash and they are pretty rigid / solid.

              I played around with different designs for a couple of days before arriving on this:

              Had the parts laser cut & folded - and it became a printer! It's only been whole for a few weeks and only printing for two weeks. It still needs a fair bit of tuning but it's on track to be pretty good. I printed one part (a simple 200mm diameter cylinder) - and I have never seen as smooth, facet free surface. Unfortunately the print terminated after 5mm due to extruder problems, which hopefully this will fix: http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1872441 I'm still waiting for the drive gear to show up though.

              Once it's proven and working as well as it can, I'll write it up as an open source hardware project on Instructables.com, along the lines of my CNC Plasma http://www.instructables.com/id/CNC-Plasma-Table/

              Si

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              • DjDemonDundefined
                DjDemonD
                last edited by

                I like it I've seen one other leadscrew/ballscrew delta. The only issue I could see would be lack of speed, but I don't doubt the rigidity or precision. What type of screw (pitch/lead) are they?

                Will look out for the write up. Be nice to see some video of it working, hope you solve your extruder issue.

                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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                • SimonRaffertyundefined
                  SimonRafferty
                  last edited by

                  The screws are 8mm/rev - so half to 1/3 the speed of a belt drive. Running RAMPS, speed could easily be a problem - but not with the Duet!

                  This is the very first time it moved under power (no microstepping so motors are not quiet - sounds cool from a SiFi Robot point of view though)
                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHBkGtcOjoc

                  This is a week or so on with the very first successful print:
                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIT03o2w2TM
                  This was before the SSR to drive the bed arrived - hence using painters tape. This is pretty slow, with low acceleration. Once the gear for the extruder shows up (should have arrived Friday!) I'll video some more at decent speed!

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                  • W3DRKundefined
                    W3DRK
                    last edited by

                    I really like the leadscrew approach! My only concern is considering there's a fair bit of torque multiplication going on, I imagine crashing the nozzle into your build surface could cause quite a bit of damage!

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                    • dc42undefined
                      dc42 administrators
                      last edited by

                      You could control the torque multiplication by using smaller motors with lower torque, e.g. Nema 14. Reducing the current on standard Nema 17 motors would not be so good because the rotor inertia would work against you, and the detent torque would eventually cause the microstep accuracy to degrade.

                      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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                      • SimonRaffertyundefined
                        SimonRafferty
                        last edited by

                        I imagine crashing the nozzle into your build surface could cause quite a bit of damage!
                        And you'd be right!
                        However, the magnetic ball joints let go before it does any damage.
                        The torque multiplication was part of what I wanted. Fast printing needs high acceleration which requires torque.

                        On a different (commercial) project I found the stretch in timing belts to be an issue moving the end effector fast - it needed high precision and the elasticity in the belt caused judder in the position. That was solved using lead screws - and hopefully they will benefit this for the same reason.

                        Si

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