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    True Bed Leveling

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

      @fcwilt said in True Bed Leveling:

      @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

      Touché

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      • ErwinH78undefined
        ErwinH78
        last edited by ErwinH78

        Hey Guys..... sorry for my late answer and thx a lot for help.

        the issue was really caused by the Y-rails. i fixed that and with the result i´m very happy.

        what do you think?

        jfjgfj.jpg

        fcwiltundefined A Former User? 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • fcwiltundefined
          fcwilt @ErwinH78
          last edited by

          @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

          Hey Guys..... sorry for my late answer and thx a lot for help.

          the issue was really caused by the Y-rails. i fixed that and with the result i´m very happy.

          Glad to hear you got it working.

          Frederick

          Printers: a E3D MS/TC setup and a RatRig Hybrid. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

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

            @ErwinH78 said in True Bed Leveling:

            Hey Guys..... sorry for my late answer and thx a lot for help.

            the issue was really caused by the Y-rails. i fixed that and with the result i´m very happy.

            what do you think?

            jfjgfj.jpg

            Glad to see you got it fixed and glad to see the very flat milled tool plate was not warped as some fool tried to tell you.

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

              @fcwilt said in True Bed Leveling:

              @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

              Sorry i didnt see your comment until now.

              As you correctly pointed out that the frame is not "level"

              The height map was showing that the rear of the LEFT Y axis rail was "higher" than the rear of the right one so that when the nozzle traversed closer to that point it (the nozzle) started to climb away from the bed which the graphic was showing happening.

              Good practice would be to level the surface the printer is sitting (and built) on and then that way you know that when you assemble the frame it is going to be level with the surface it is on is already level, But in the real world that is not always possible.

              Which is why i said to build using digital inclinometers zero'ed to the build surface, that means the printer will always be in sync with the build surface and that way zero will be relative zero relative to the surface the printer is sitting on, even if it isn't actually absolute zero but things will at least be perpendicular and parallel to the surface the printer will spend its life on.

              Unless of course you have adjustable feet on the printer you can then set everything to absolute zero

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