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    Still can't print due to extruder steppers skipping steps

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    • Vetiundefined
      Veti
      last edited by

      with a 5:1 reduction 50mm/s second might be to much.

      try 25mm/s

      also have you tried disabling pressure advance? 0.6 is A LOT and will most likely be the cause of your skipped steps.

      Edgars Batnaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Edgars Batnaundefined
        Edgars Batna @Veti
        last edited by

        @veti The mechanicals are just fine. I do not see how I would need any other values. The first layer is 30mm/s btw.

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        • Vetiundefined
          Veti
          last edited by

          your extruder max speed. not your print speed.

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          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @Edgars Batna
            last edited by dc42

            @edgars-batna said in Still can't print due to extruder steppers skipping steps:

            I cannot use any official releases, as the first layer usually fails due to extruders going backwards. I'm resorting to my own "fixed/crippled" 2.02 branch in the old topic.

            1. Have you tried firmware 2.03RC1 ?

            2. Your extruder microstepping is likely too high for the steps/mm you are using. Try x16 instead of x64.

            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

            Edgars Batnaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Edgars Batnaundefined
              Edgars Batna @dc42
              last edited by Edgars Batna

              @dc42 I already tried it... It was x16 and I only increased it after it didn't work with 2.03 RC1.

              @Veti The max speed is calibrated. There is no sign of the extruders going too fast. I just tried M203 E1000:1000, M203 E100:100 with no change. In fact, there is such high torque reserve that one of the Bowden push-fittings blew up last time when I cranked up a very high speed print test. This is all on the crippled branch. On the official 2.x the extruders move too erratically even at low speeds. I'm babysitting this problem for the good part of almost a year now.

              Here's a comparison photo:
              0_1557589678566_4c7ba9ac-2037-466b-9784-97d489c09128-grafik.png

              Left - PA 0.6, my 2.02 (I already removed the brim)
              Right - PA 0.6 official 2.03RC1

              To prove the point that this is not a PA-heavy print I printed the same in 2.03RC1 with PA disabled:
              0_1557594905582_efa98863-caff-41b8-be1c-b1198a1f8c4c-grafik.png

              Which is which? There's only marginal difference, mostly inside at the start of infil where pressure was now insufficient.

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              • Vetiundefined
                Veti
                last edited by

                and you have tried with pressure advance off?

                Edgars Batnaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Edgars Batnaundefined
                  Edgars Batna @Veti
                  last edited by Edgars Batna

                  @veti Well, it's in the original post. Pressure advance appears to cause this regardless of the value. At low speed variation and small parts I can disable PA, but, for larger prints with varying segments (thus speeds), PA makes a hell of a difference to the corners etc.

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                  • Vetiundefined
                    Veti
                    last edited by

                    i think the problem is with your bowden tube.
                    can you reduce the length. like mounting the extruder very close above the centre of your bed?

                    do you have the 1.9mm bowden tube? this can cause higher friction and prevent to filament from moving fast enough for pa.

                    Edgars Batnaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Edgars Batnaundefined
                      Edgars Batna @Veti
                      last edited by Edgars Batna

                      @veti Already done everything I could. This occurs regardless of the tube. I've tried both the blue Capricorn and the usual whites and we're talking not new but well used tubes which are looser on the inside. I've ruled out the mechanicals more than once. I even modified the Firmware which near-eliminated the problem (near because implementation is far from clean and I know for a fact it, albeit rarely, causes some blobbing where it previously completely failed).

                      It's basically served on a plate.

                      deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • deckingmanundefined
                        deckingman @Edgars Batna
                        last edited by

                        @edgars-batna It might be an idea to re=post a link to the video you had in your original thread. That way, people would see the crazy behaviour of the extruders running backwards and wouldn't make comments about Bowden tube materials and dimensions.

                        I assume you are still getting that behaviour as per your video?

                        Ian
                        https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
                        https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

                        Edgars Batnaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Edgars Batnaundefined
                          Edgars Batna @deckingman
                          last edited by Edgars Batna

                          @deckingman Yes, you are right. Totally forgot about the video.

                          Here's the old video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXsFLG7AMug&feature=youtu.be

                          The extruders are commanded so erratically, that they end up moving backwards. While digging through the firmware I've observed that this can be tipped one or the other way (overextrusion or underextrusion) depending on how factors are mathematically rounded in PA computations, but I couldn't find which one and by how much as the results were not perfect in all cases. Thus I think me or the implementation is missing something other than just rounding.

                          I've done major upgrades to the printer but the basic setup is still the same. I just ran the same test script and the same thing still happens.

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