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    True Bed Leveling

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    • ErwinH78undefined
      ErwinH78
      last edited by

      i have some problems to configurate the true bed leveling on my ratrig vcore pro.

      the positons for the lead screws i set to the balls of the mounts and the leveling points are set as near as possible to the balls.

      when i start mesh bed leveling one corner is high. the strange thing is when i rotate the plate the issue is in the same corner. so the plate should be ok. dont know it seems something in my configuration is wrong.

      anyone here who knows wha1.jpg 2.jpg 3.jpg ts wrong?bed.g config.g

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      • fcwiltundefined
        fcwilt
        last edited by fcwilt

        On my printer the height map looked very much like yours.

        The problem was that the end of the Y rail was low, as indicated by the high corner of the height map.

        I was able to loosen it at the low end and raise it little by little, creating a height map after each adjustment, until the height map was satisfactory.

        Frederick

        Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

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        • janjohundefined
          janjoh
          last edited by janjoh

          For "true bed leveling" you need three independant Z-motors.

          But, as for your question. If the error is in the same corner you must have an imperfect kinematic system. Meaning your bed may very well be leveled, but your printer is not square.

          Also, Have you cancelled all existing compensation before running the probe?

          Edit: fcwilt was quicker 🙂

          ErwinH78undefined A Former User? 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ErwinH78undefined
            ErwinH78
            last edited by ErwinH78

            Ok. Makes sense for me 🤔

            Is there any good way to adjust this so accurately as possible?

            The frame was assembled with steel square and lineal

            A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ErwinH78undefined
              ErwinH78
              last edited by ErwinH78

              ok now i tried to get the left back side of rail a little bit down. i used feeler gauge tape 0,15mm. the highmap didn´t change. no idea whats going wrong

              Foto 20.09.20, 09 03 53.jpg

              11.JPG ![1_1600585544055_Foto 20.09.20, 09 04 12.jpg](Lade 100% hoch) ![0_1600585544055_Foto 20.09.20, 09 03 53.jpg](Lade 100% hoch) Foto 20.09.20, 09 04 12.jpg

              fcwiltundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • ErwinH78undefined
                ErwinH78 @janjoh
                last edited by

                @janjoh said in True Bed Leveling:

                Also, Have you cancelled all existing compensation before running the probe?

                Where can I find if there is any compensation activ? 🤔

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                • A Former User?
                  A Former User @janjoh
                  last edited by

                  @janjoh said in True Bed Leveling:

                  For "true bed leveling" you need three independant Z-motors.

                  He does have three independent Z-Axis Motors

                  janjohundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • A Former User?
                    A Former User @ErwinH78
                    last edited by A Former User

                    @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                    Ok. Makes sense for me 🤔

                    Is there any good way to adjust this so accurately as possible?

                    The frame was assembled with steel square and lineal

                    I use a couple digital inclinometers zeroed to the build surface one for X and another for Y

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • fcwiltundefined
                      fcwilt @ErwinH78
                      last edited by

                      @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                      ok now i tried to get the left back side of rail a little bit down. i used feeler gauge tape 0,15mm. the highmap didn´t change. no idea whats going wrong

                      The rise in the height map at the corner indicates that end of the rail is low, so it needs to be raised.

                      I simply loosened the screws holding the end of the extrusion and moved the extrusion up.

                      Frederick

                      Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                      ErwinH78undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ErwinH78undefined
                        ErwinH78 @fcwilt
                        last edited by

                        @fcwilt said in True Bed Leveling:

                        @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                        ok now i tried to get the left back side of rail a little bit down. i used feeler gauge tape 0,15mm. the highmap didn´t change. no idea whats going wrong

                        The rise in the height map at the corner indicates that end of the rail is low, so it needs to be raised.

                        I simply loosened the screws holding the end of the extrusion and moved the extrusion up.

                        Frederick

                        mhmm ok. ok maybe in the wrong direction but this changed nothing in the measurament. the issue is exact the same as before

                        fcwiltundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • fcwiltundefined
                          fcwilt @ErwinH78
                          last edited by

                          @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                          @fcwilt said in True Bed Leveling:

                          @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                          ok now i tried to get the left back side of rail a little bit down. i used feeler gauge tape 0,15mm. the highmap didn´t change. no idea whats going wrong

                          The rise in the height map at the corner indicates that end of the rail is low, so it needs to be raised.

                          I simply loosened the screws holding the end of the extrusion and moved the extrusion up.

                          Frederick

                          mhmm ok. ok maybe in the wrong direction but this changed nothing in the measurament. the issue is exact the same as before

                          Hi,

                          Well the high part of the height map is up some 0.32mm.

                          And I see a shim but it does not appear to be at the end of the rail.

                          It looks like your frame is held together with gussets. It should be easy to loosen the bolts securing the end of the extrusion and shift it. This would insure you have no unevenness in the rail due to shims.

                          Frederick

                          Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • A Former User?
                            A Former User
                            last edited by A Former User

                            Looking at the pic the rails are inverted, the X/Y carriage hang down underneath?

                            this being so then the rail/extrusion needs to be lowered not raised, as from the height map that corner is showing the nozzle to be rising up

                            fcwiltundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • fcwiltundefined
                              fcwilt @A Former User
                              last edited by

                              @CaLviNx said in True Bed Leveling:

                              Looking at the pic the rails are inverted, the X/Y carriage hang down underneath?

                              this being so then the rail/extrusion needs to be lowered not raised, as from the height map that corner is showing the nozzle to be rising up

                              Hmm...

                              I just did a four point height map putting a metal plate along the front edge of the bed ensuring it was placed so that the probe triggered on it at both front corners.

                              The height map indicated that the front of the bed has higher than the back by the thickness of the plate.

                              So if "raising" the bed did that wouldn't lowering the front ends of extrusions/rails have the same effect?

                              Frederick

                              Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                              A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • TDKundefined
                                TDK
                                last edited by

                                Your bed is warped. Auto-leveling isn't going to help here.

                                In the height map, look at the three points it uses as the true-leveling probe points. They are all near zero. So it's doing its job.

                                The docs say to have probe points near the leadscrews, but really you can have them anywhere and it'll do the least-squares best fit. I use 4 points at each corner and one point in the center and I think the result looks better than using just 3.

                                A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • janjohundefined
                                  janjoh @A Former User
                                  last edited by

                                  @CaLviNx said in True Bed Leveling:

                                  @janjoh said in True Bed Leveling:

                                  For "true bed leveling" you need three independant Z-motors.

                                  He does have three independent Z-Axis Motors

                                  Oh, I didn't see a screw at the third rail. Sooo I assumed two.. and that may very well have been a mistake on my part.

                                  A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • A Former User?
                                    A Former User @janjoh
                                    last edited by

                                    @janjoh said in True Bed Leveling:

                                    @CaLviNx said in True Bed Leveling:

                                    @janjoh said in True Bed Leveling:

                                    For "true bed leveling" you need three independant Z-motors.

                                    He does have three independent Z-Axis Motors

                                    Oh, I didn't see a screw at the third rail. Sooo I assumed two.. and that may very well have been a mistake on my part.

                                    My journeyman always drummed into me, : assume nothing, find out, assumption is the mother of all f**k ups

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • A Former User?
                                      A Former User @TDK
                                      last edited by A Former User

                                      @TDK said in True Bed Leveling:

                                      Your bed is warped. Auto-leveling isn't going to help here.

                                      In the height map, look at the three points it uses as the true-leveling probe points. They are all near zero. So it's doing its job.

                                      The docs say to have probe points near the leadscrews, but really you can have them anywhere and it'll do the least-squares best fit. I use 4 points at each corner and one point in the center and I think the result looks better than using just 3.

                                      Really ? please tell me how can you be 100% of that without physically being there and laying the milled tool plate on a granite surface plate and physically measuring to see if it is warped or not, that's an amazing leap of faith and an assumption at best, I dont do assumptions, i prefer facts myself.

                                      The usual "if it looks like sht, smells like sht, tastes like sh*t" applies, and the fastest thing to check would be if both y axis rails are perpendicular to each other, then and ONLY then start looking down other avenues, K.I.S.S applies. work methodically using a process of elimination to reach the reason for the anomaly, and dont take stabs in the dark without proof.

                                      I would also advise the OP to remember to mentally separate the two features at work here.

                                      We have "auto bed compensation" (G32) which is used to probe close to (in this case THREE) lead screws, that will work out to be a triangular pattern at THREE POINTS ONLY.

                                      This is why you define the locations of the "lead-screws" using
                                      M671: Define positions of Z lead-screws or bed leveling screws

                                      And that G32 runs to make sure that all three screws in this case are in sync at the same height, that is true level.

                                      Also remember Level does NOT equate to Flat, it only equates to LEVEL.

                                      AFTER G32 has established a datum and "leveled" the three lead screws you then run (G29) "mesh grid COMPENSATION" THIS IS NOT leveling G32 ALREADY did that.

                                      The purpose of G29 is to ascertain just how FLAT (or NOT) the print surface is.

                                      I have a picture of the exact same bed surface to illustrate.

                                      The top picture is probed above the beds 4 adjusters and looks pretty much level.

                                      The bottom picture is a multiple probe of a defined grid of the same bed immediately AFTER making sure it is level.

                                      Level is NOT Flat.jpg

                                      TDKundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • TDKundefined
                                        TDK @A Former User
                                        last edited by TDK

                                        @CaLviNx said in True Bed Leveling:

                                        Really ? please tell me how can you be 100% of that without physically being there and laying the milled tool plate on a granite surface plate and physically measuring to see if it is warped or not

                                        I'm going off of this picture by OP:

                                        @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

                                        11.JPG ![1_1600585544055_Foto 20.09.20, 09 04 12.jpg](Lade 100% hoch)

                                        in which you can see the bed is clearly non-planar. A warped frame or non-planar XY motion could also cause this.

                                        Since bed leveling only adjusts the best fit plane, it's not going to remove the one corner that is warped upward.

                                        A Former User? fcwiltundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • A Former User?
                                          A Former User @TDK
                                          last edited by

                                          @TDK

                                          You are correct Insofar as there is a rise at that point but from the picture you cannot assert what is causing it. So you cannot use the word warped with any degree of certainty.

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                                          • fcwiltundefined
                                            fcwilt @TDK
                                            last edited by

                                            @TDK said in True Bed Leveling:

                                            in which you can see the bed is clearly non-planar. A warped frame or non-planar XY motion could also cause this.

                                            Initially you said "Your bed is warped".

                                            You seem to have amended your analysis.

                                            Frederick

                                            Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                                            A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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