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    New heated enclosure printer

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    • mrehorstdmdundefined
      mrehorstdmd @coseng
      last edited by

      @coseng Try printing in wider lines and thinner layers. Prusa slicer will automatically adjust layer thickness based on overhang angle/detail (I think) if you enable it.

      https://drmrehorst.blogspot.com/

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      • cosengundefined
        coseng @mrehorstdmd
        last edited by

        @mrehorstdmd said in New heated enclosure printer:

        @coseng Try printing in wider lines and thinner layers. Prusa slicer will automatically adjust layer thickness based on overhang angle/detail (I think) if you enable it.

        Hmm, so you think the bead is falling off the edge of the part before adhering? I am printing the outer wall last to try to prevent that and this part has 3 walls. It is small enough to test with and I can cut off the lower section to get right to the problem area. Maybe higher print temp too to make the bead 'stickier'?

        Chris
        Cosentino Engineering

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        • sebkritikelundefined
          sebkritikel @coseng
          last edited by

          @coseng Not quite ideal, but I've set Cura up such that when a third tool is enabled (and of course selected to print the model with - get the right tool-changes in RRF), the machine disallowed area (preview) represents the printable area of half my build plate.

          https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/13696/new-large-format-idex-printer-project/22
          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_CbTmiBqsw

          I say not ideal, as the way I structured this approach is 'if the number of active extruders is greater than 2, limit my print area to this width'.

          "machine_disallowed_areas": { "value": "[ [ [0, -237.5], [0, 237.5], [225, 237.5], [225, -237.5] ] ] if len(extruderValues('extruder_nr')) > 2 else []"} 
          

          A better approach, but one I couldn't get to work, would have been 'if extruder 3 is selected, limit my print area to this width'. One of these days I'd like to take a look at the inner workings of the various BCN3D forks of Cura (their old Cura, and their new Stratos) and see how they handle the machine disallowed area. They allow you to select a print mode (like a Cura quality/nozzle selection), which injects the mirror/duplication GCODE into the preamble of the print file.

          Large(ish?) IDEX - 6HC, 1HCL
          Stratasys Dimension 1200es to 6HC Conversion

          cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • cosengundefined
            coseng @sebkritikel
            last edited by

            @sebkritikel said in New heated enclosure printer:

            Not quite ideal.......

            Found this online which says IDEX support so will give it a try:
            https://www.bcn3d.com/bcn3d-stratos/
            https://support.bcn3d.com/knowledge/bcn3d-stratos-introduction

            It is based on Cura so the settings should be familiar, and interestingly enough found a post online relating to native Cura IDEX support:

            https://community.ultimaker.com/topic/39303-one-at-a-time-mode-with-idex-printer-duplication/?do=findComment&comment=301971

            Chris
            Cosentino Engineering

            sebkritikelundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • sebkritikelundefined
              sebkritikel @coseng
              last edited by

              @coseng If you want to go further down the rabbit hole, some other discussions I had on a user in regards to BCN3D's forks (and slicer/IDEX compatibility in general):
              https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/19167/creating-a-new-idex-3d-printer-with-duet-2-wifi/31?_=1670003869964

              Large(ish?) IDEX - 6HC, 1HCL
              Stratasys Dimension 1200es to 6HC Conversion

              cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • cosengundefined
                coseng @sebkritikel
                last edited by

                @sebkritikel A rabbit hole is exactly what I am trying to avoid! 😉 Didn't see that Merlin firmware part, maybe they've made progress in the past year or 2?

                Chris
                Cosentino Engineering

                cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cosengundefined
                  coseng @coseng
                  last edited by

                  Hmm, IDEX is not as plug and play as I was hoping!

                  An alternate solution is to repurpose the extra UV Clearpath motors and build a CNC plasma cutter with them. They are more than strong enough to push a plasma gantry around pretty quickly and from what I can see with some friends that purchased stepper based tables, unless you spend well into the $10ks, the Duet control board seems to be a step up, and the Clearpath motors are two steps up! A 4'x4' CoreXY cutter would be pretty useful and more rigid than most of the table setups I see out there.

                  @dc42 , I saw some older threads about it but there never seemed to be any final results. Did you end up doing those software modifications you were talking about for the torch height control?

                  https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/8403/advice-on-adding-plasma-torch-height-control/10

                  @fall-apart-dave @mawildoer @andymidtf
                  Did any of you ever make it to a working Duet-based machine?

                  Chris
                  Cosentino Engineering

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                  • cosengundefined
                    coseng @coseng
                    last edited by coseng

                    With this cold weather we're having my big industrial space is at least 15F colder than it was in spring/summer and the machine is misbehaving a bit. After a bunch of heater errors I had to rerun the heater optimization routines and think the bed 'shape' is a bit off as I am having first layer adhesion problems, but only on the corner of a big part. The first layer extrusion is mostly flat but is roundish where it is not adhering, so think the bed is drooping a bit. My bltouch is fried so I have been manually setting Z, but am not sure about the heightmap file format. I can use a plunge indicator mounted to the carriage to accurately map out the bed, but am not sure how the file entries are mapped to the bed.

                    For the heightmap file below are the matrix entries, does the first entry of -.094 correspond to (maxX, maxY) or (minX, MinY)? Are rows X and columns Y? Does a negative value mean the print is closer or further from the printhead?

                    RepRapFirmware height map file v2 generated at 2017-07-21 20:53,
                    axis0,axis1,min0,max0,min1,max1,radius,spacing0,spacing1,num0,num1
                    X,Y,-310.00,315.00,-288.00,288.00,-1.00,156.25,288.00,5,3
                    -0.094, -0.047, -.020, -0.127, -0.18
                    -0.094, -0.047, -.020, -0.127, -0.18
                    -0.094, -0.07, -.010, -0.127, -0.18
                    -0.10, -0.07, 0.000, -0.127, -0.18
                    -0.10, -0.09, 0.010, -0.127, -0.2

                    Thanks.

                    Chris
                    Cosentino Engineering

                    dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dc42undefined
                      dc42 administrators @coseng
                      last edited by

                      @coseng each row is a set of X points from min to max. The first row is min Y, the last is max Y.

                      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

                      cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • cosengundefined
                        coseng @dc42
                        last edited by

                        @dc42 Thanks!

                        Chris
                        Cosentino Engineering

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                        • cosengundefined
                          coseng
                          last edited by

                          It's been a while, the printer has been working well, but am about to do another run of fairings so am going to try to improve it a bit.

                          There is some waviness to tall and slender parts that increases as the parts get slimmer and taller in Z. Looking at it while printing, it seems that my construction of a carbon fiber Z carriage works against me in one way. I used high temp CF for its rigidity and low thermal expansion and high enough temp rating. This means that my Z carriage is pretty light, and at high printhead accelerations, can see a slight bit of movement that comes from not enough torsional stiffness of my z-axis rail/leadscrew wended frame. 20+ inch parts can get a visible wiggle at the top as the vibrations die down. I am not interested in tearing it all apart and having to do welding and realignment/reassembly, so am going to try to take the easy way out by putting a large steel weight on the bottom of the z carriage. A heavier carriage means less reaction displacement for a given printhead acceleration, hopefully stabilizing it and reducing the waviness. It is an easily done and undone modification, so pretty low risk.

                          The waviness I am getting is not stepper induced oscillations as I am using servo/steppers which are silent and smooth.

                          Chris
                          Cosentino Engineering

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                          • cosengundefined
                            coseng
                            last edited by

                            Well, the added weight to the Z carriage seems to have reduced the oscillations a bit which is great.

                            I am a bit under the gun for our next race outing in October, so looked to outsource some of the fairing parts. So far, 4 out of 4 vendors have refused a quote as the parts are too thin and difficult! They all recommended sectioning them into multiple pieces and gluing together. When I said that the parts have been printed successfully multiple times in one piece on a home built printer, they were very surprised.

                            On one hand those responses were pretty disappointing. I was expecting that industrial printers would be a step above what I hacked together. They are not. On the other hand it speaks volumes to the quality of product that Duet3D sells and the support from them and other users that is provided on this forum. Many thanks to everyone that has chimed in along the way, @dc42 and @mrehorstdmd in particular.

                            I've also recently printed a few big, chunky parts that came out excellent with none of the artifacts the tall, thin fairing parts have. I guess I will focus more on bracing for the fairing parts to keep them from shaking during printing. Maybe more retracts will help too. I do notice a little noise when it is doing the infill, which is assume is the printhead hitting slightly high areas of the previous layer. I am also having some issues with the fill areas on the first couple of layers looking really fuzzy, which I think is over extrusion, but I reduce the flow down to about 70% and it looks the same. The parts come out fine and I am still time constrained, so am kicking that can well down the road.

                            This is a pattern for a carbon fiber gas tank. Printed in two halves and glued together. About 3.5 gallon capacity. There was a slight bit of the print rising up from the build plate, but nothing major and easily taken care of when it is sanded and bondo'd to get a good surface finish to take a mold from. Also doing a mold for a bellypan that is coming out just as good.

                            Screenshot_20240916_225102_Gallery.jpg

                            Chris
                            Cosentino Engineering

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                            • cosengundefined
                              coseng
                              last edited by coseng

                              I am going to print another set of bodywork and finish it out for a nice high gloss paint job but wanted to get some better surface finish to minimize the amount of hand finishing needed. The added weight did help, but in reality my Z axis support structure was lacking in torsinoal stiffness. I didn't think that there would be a need for high torsional stiffness, but I was wrong. As the printhead traverses back and forth over the part sometimes it slightly makes contact with previously printed material and causes the table to wobble back and forth.
                              To fix this, I added an outboard table guide that is just a long straight piece of steel that a forked steel guide finger that bolts to the carriage engages with.

                              20241112_153154.jpg

                              That is a gear rack, but I only used it because it was ground straight and flat and was available. Moral of the story, design sufficiently rigid structures!

                              It is a bit of a kludge, but it does work and significantly increases the torsional stiffness of the Z-axis. The parts did come out noticable better, especially the taller areas.

                              20241112_153339.jpg

                              As an additional note, we are using the Smooth-On XTC-3D product and am finding it works very well.

                              Chris
                              Cosentino Engineering

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                              • cosengundefined
                                coseng
                                last edited by

                                With the rework on the carriage I needed to redo the mesh compensation but am having problems loading heightmap.xls. I am using the G29 S1 command and getting the following console error:

                                G29 S1
                                Error: G29: Failed to load height map from file 0:/sys/heightmap.csv: bad header line or wrong version header

                                This is the heightmap file:

                                RepRapFirmware height map file v3 generated at 2017-07-21 20:53,
                                axis0,axis1,min0,max0,min1,max1,radius,spacing0,spacing1,num0,num1
                                X,Y,-310.00,315.00,-288.00,288.00,-1.00,156.25,144,5,5
                                -0.46, -0.4, -.32, -0.25, 0.08
                                -0.3, -0.25, -.2, 0., 0.1
                                -0.02, 0.02, 0., 0., 0.02
                                -0.3, -0.3, -0.25, -0.3, -0.35
                                -.35, -0.36, -0.35, -.4, -.5

                                I used to get the warning saying that it was loaded with Z not at zero so may be some offset, but it always worked. With this new error it is not loading at all. I didn't think i had changed anything in the heightmap file except the offset values. None of my older heightmaps load either, they all give the above error.

                                I am using Duet Web Control 3.4.1 and the printer is a Duet 3 MB6HC (MB6HC) with 3.4.1 Firmware.

                                Also, @dc42 is a negative value the bed being closer or further from the nozzle?

                                Thanks,

                                Chris
                                Cosentino Engineering

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                                • droftartsundefined
                                  droftarts administrators @coseng
                                  last edited by

                                  @coseng The heightmap should be v2, not v3, in the header. Did you change that manually? For example, mine is:

                                  RepRapFirmware height map file v2 generated at 2024-03-27 21:04, min error -0.091, max error 0.109, mean 0.004, deviation 0.056
                                  axis0,axis1,min0,max0,min1,max1,radius,spacing0,spacing1,num0,num1
                                  X,Y,-85.00,85.00,-85.00,85.00,-1.00,42.50,42.50,5,5
                                        0, -0.048, -0.091, -0.077,  0.031
                                        0, -0.074, -0.058, -0.037,  0.014
                                   -0.022, -0.007, -0.007,  0.022,  0.072
                                    0.002,  0.018,  0.071, -0.022,  0.109
                                        0,  0.089,  0.083,  0.049, -0.026
                                  

                                  You can always delete the heightmap.csv, and run bed mesh again.

                                  A negative value is the bed being further from the nozzle.

                                  Ian

                                  Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                                  cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • cosengundefined
                                    coseng @droftarts
                                    last edited by coseng

                                    @droftarts Wow, i feel stupid! I don't remember changing it but must have as it now loads. Thanks!

                                    Chris
                                    Cosentino Engineering

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                                    • cosengundefined
                                      coseng
                                      last edited by

                                      Hi all, I've come to a crossroads in life and my bike project is being shut down. As a result, all of my equipment is up for sale, including this 3D printer.

                                      The print volume is 680x624x920mm and it is set up to use 1, 3, or 10kg spools from pushplastic.com It should be easy to make adapters to use any other spools less than 10kg in size.

                                      If anyone is interested, please browse through this thread which thoroughly details its components and printing ability.

                                      For more information please contact Ben Claman, ben@buoyant.aero.

                                      Thanks again to Duet3D and this forum for all the help in getting this beast to print well.

                                      Chris Cosentino
                                      Cosentino Engineering

                                      Chris
                                      Cosentino Engineering

                                      dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • dc42undefined
                                        dc42 administrators @coseng
                                        last edited by

                                        @coseng I'm sorry to hear that your project is shutting down. I suggest you post in a new thread with "For sale" in the title and give the machine specifications and your location in that post.

                                        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

                                        cosengundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • cosengundefined
                                          coseng @dc42
                                          last edited by

                                          @dc42 Will do, thanks.

                                          Chris Cosentino
                                          Cosentino Engineering

                                          Chris
                                          Cosentino Engineering

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