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    Piezo20 probe and piezo kit now available

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    • Ad-1undefined
      Ad-1
      last edited by

      deckingman… I think Idris 3 piezo design could work for you.

      Idris... I like your idea better. Lightweight effector and no moving/sliding parts. I went the other way to avoid soldering piezos, something I'm not that good at.
      How do you solder to last? And they are connected in parallel I presume?

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      • Moriquendiundefined
        Moriquendi
        last edited by

        They are connected in parallel.

        Preparation and stress relief is the key to soldering piezos easily and to last. My process goes like this.

        For the electrical connections:
        Thoroughly clean the piezo with acetone or alcohol
        Tin both wires
        Tin the brass ring of the piezo
        Tin the centre contact (put the solder wire on the contact the the soldering iron (at 360deg) on top of the solder, as soon as the solder melts, remove the iron.
        Solder the wires to the piezo, tinned wire on tinned contact, touch momentarily with the iron and you're done.

        The trick to getting the connection to last is to fix the wires somewhere close to the piezo, the solder joint will pull off with very little force so you need to make sure any force on the wires is taken up before it reaches the piezo.

        To solder the nut to the back I'm using solder paste but you could do the same thing by tinning the nut, cleanliness is key, I sand the nut and the piezo with very fine sandpaper before soldering then use a very hot iron on top of the nut to reduce the thermal stress on the piezo ceramic.

        Idris

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        • kraegarundefined
          kraegar
          last edited by

          I finally got around to finalizing my "simple" piezo mount to work with the 713maker hotend mounts.

          Details are here: http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2268205

          Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
          https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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          • DjDemonDundefined
            DjDemonD
            last edited by

            Thats' good, very simple which is always a plus.

            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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            • kraegarundefined
              kraegar
              last edited by

              I need to run some repeatability tests with it next time I have some free cycles. Between 1.18 and the new mount, it's very sensitive now, with no false triggers.

              Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
              https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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              • Russ Griesundefined
                Russ Gries
                last edited by

                just somthing i found : https://www.physikinstrumente.com/en/products/piezoceramic-actuators/bender-actuators/pd410-round-picma-multilayer-bender-actuators-103050/?_ga=1.257660424.2011207929.1493275888

                One Day At A Time…
                My Main Research Page:
                http://rwgresearch.com/open-projects/3d-printing-research/

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                • Russ Griesundefined
                  Russ Gries
                  last edited by

                  and another, I'm sure theses are $$$$$$

                  but you know….

                  https://www.hbm.com/en/3244/paceline-clp-piezoelectric-subminiature-load-washer/

                  One Day At A Time…
                  My Main Research Page:
                  http://rwgresearch.com/open-projects/3d-printing-research/

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                  • DjDemonDundefined
                    DjDemonD
                    last edited by

                    These both (especially the first one) look wonderful, but I am sure are both very expensive. I asked physik instruments for a quote, there disc looks like it would integrate quite easily, it might be possible to use it as a z-probe, depending on cost, or it might be a nice control to test against.

                    I think one of the things which makes the current implementation so attractive is that the piezo itself is cheap and (apart from the soldered connections) robust.

                    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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                    • DjDemonDundefined
                      DjDemonD
                      last edited by

                      So the first product is £300.

                      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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                      • dc42undefined
                        dc42 administrators
                        last edited by

                        There are plenty of bare piezo ring transducers available, see https://www.steminc.com/PZT/en/piezo-ring. These are not bimorphs, so they respond directly to pressure instead of to flexing.

                        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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                        • DjDemonDundefined
                          DjDemonD
                          last edited by

                          Just a note about electrical interference. I have until recently been saying "its not a problem to have a long lead from the piezo to the signal board", and it hasn't been a problem for me until now.

                          Maybe its because I am now running dual extruders and new fans and there's more wiring, especially motors, maybe its because I installed a 20mm piezo module on my kossel XL, and 20mm piezo's produce a weaker signal (on average) than the 27mm one it replaced, I am not really sure. However the piezo probe in general had been performing much more poorly than normal, so perhaps it was the second extruder. I was noticing it worked fairly well cold, but almost non-functional with the hotend heated, and the temperature near the piezo was only 30 deg C. I scoped the signal from the piezo at the PCB down the 80cm of wire and and it looked like I'd connected the scope to my TV antenna.

                          Anyway the short version is - if you're talking about a hotend probe, put the PCB on the effector/carriage, to keep the piezo lead short. The range of usable adjustment on the PCB ("the tuning window" if you want) will be much wider, which will then mean you will be able to work with a better range of temperatures also.

                          Important lesson for me, I was beginning to think I had bad PCBs (I don't) or that piezo just wasn't doing the job, maybe its not as great as I thought it was, and low and behold there is a perfectly rational explanation for the problem.

                          Am now calibrating to 0.02mm deviation.

                          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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                          • kraegarundefined
                            kraegar
                            last edited by

                            David - that link's very interesting… I might have to try one of those. I know you have experience with piezo's, any recommendations on specs for one? Or will any of those work as long as it's physically the right shape? How hard are they to solder to?

                            Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
                            https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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                            • dc42undefined
                              dc42 administrators
                              last edited by

                              StemInc has a note about soldering to their piezos somewhere on their web site. AFAIR the danger is that the soldering iron will soak up the silver coating on the piezo, so you need to solder the wire on as quickly as possible and use solder with a silver content.

                              You could also use silver-loaded epoxy to make the connection, or perhaps the silver-loaded solution that Maplin sells would hold a fine wire on. Or use spring contacts.

                              I've only used StemInc piezo transducers for ultrasonic transmission and reception (which is what they are designed for), not for shock sensing, so I can't offer any recommendations.

                              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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                              • kraegarundefined
                                kraegar
                                last edited by

                                So, this may be obvious to others, but I realized that I'd been causing my own headache. I'd been drilling the piezos with as small of a hole as I could fit a bowden through. Had a high number that seemed plenty sensitive in testing, but often failed to trigger. I finally realized that it was due to the bowden being able to touch the piezo, and deadening the vibrations. I drilled a larger (1/4") hole in a new one, and it's just as sensitive in my tests, but also registers every tape since the bowden can't touch it as my delta moves around the plate.

                                Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
                                https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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                                • DjDemonDundefined
                                  DjDemonD
                                  last edited by

                                  Yeah I've been using 4.5mm and 5mm for most of them, that being said place the bowden adaptor above the piezo sensor assembly and just run a guide tube down through the piezo, problem solved.

                                  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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                                  • kraegarundefined
                                    kraegar
                                    last edited by

                                    Yeah, I have a short bit of bowden that passes through the piezo, but it could still flex just enough to make contact… I was drilling the holes so the bowden just passed through them. 1/4" is 6.3mm, and it's still plenty sensitive.

                                    Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
                                    https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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                                    • DjDemonDundefined
                                      DjDemonD
                                      last edited by

                                      I was today asked a good question "What dive height should I use with piezo probe in M558?"

                                      This is my reply "I don't specify a dive height and I don't use the H parameter on my printer. I presume the system default is used (which I think is 5mm). Setting a slightly higher dive height might help to smooth mechanical noise as any vibrations and ringing will subside once the effector/carriage comes to a stop above the probing point. However if you are getting no issues with false triggers "probe triggered before probing move" errors, then probing is faster with a smaller dive height. The other advantage would be if you frequently swap printing surfaces which might have different thicknesses.

                                      It is less important than with the IR sensor for example as so long as you are not dragging the nozzle across the bed from one point to the next there is no requirement to begin at any given height above the bed then look for a change in the way the IR sensor goes from open to triggered as the bed approaches. With piezo you either touch it or you don't."

                                      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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                                      • dc42undefined
                                        dc42 administrators
                                        last edited by

                                        The first part is true, but not the last paragraph. If the probe trigger height is positive then probing starts with Z = dive height + trigger height. If the probe trigger height is negative then it starts with Z = dive height. So you can use a low dive height with any type of probe once you have the machine calibrated and/or the bed leveled so that the expected height errors are small.

                                        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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                                        • DjDemonDundefined
                                          DjDemonD
                                          last edited by

                                          That's fair enough. I would only use large dive height (combined with a slightly increased starting homed height (H parameter in config.g M665) if I were regularly swapping beds in and out of varying thicknesses, and allowing auto-calibration to adjust for it on a per-print basis.

                                          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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                                          • kraegarundefined
                                            kraegar
                                            last edited by

                                            I updated my piezo mount: http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2268205

                                            The changes might be helpful to others. Basically I've learned that you can make the spacer above the hotend that presses on the piezo, and the ring that goes around the hotend both "full width" with just enough of a gap they slide nicely. I'm still using a nylon washer for my center spacer, but uploaded an STL for a spacer the same size. Making both of those wider added even more stability to my nozzle, but didn't lower the sensitivity at all.

                                            Co-Creator of the RailcoreII CoreXY printer
                                            https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2407174

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