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    I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying

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    • deckingmanundefined
      deckingman @brunofporto
      last edited by

      @brunofporto said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

      @deckingman said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

      Aren't those jump wires too thin?

      They are good for at least 20Amps, so 480 watts@24V. Given that I only use a 200Watt PSU for entire printer and the Duex only has 5 extruders and a few fans connected to it, I'd say they are more than adequate.☺

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

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      • elmoretundefined
        elmoret
        last edited by

        Those brown wires are good for 20A? generally 20A means at least 14ga. Those don't look like 14ga wires.

        I don't think that's your problem, but I wouldn't put 20A through what looks like 20ga wires.

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

          @elmoret. Assuming by brown wires you mean the solid copper links, then I thought they were 2.5mm but they might be 1.5mm. So conservatively they are good for 20Amps - could be 27 amps if they are 2.5mm. https://www.stroma.com/news/current-carrying-capacity-for-cables

          I've no idea what the US equivalent of that is but over here in the UK it's what we use for out house wiring. We call it it twin and earth and those links came out of the main insulated twin cores (not the solid earth which is thinner).

          Edit. Just measured them with my digital calipers and they are 1.5mm, so good for 20Amps as I stated.

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

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          • elmoretundefined
            elmoret
            last edited by

            They look like brown, insulated wires. If they're bare copper then I agree the diameter is suitable.

            I definitely wouldn't use bare exposed copper wires like that, too much risk of short, but again unrelated to the problem you're posting about.

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

              @elmoret Just out of curiosity,have we met? Have I done or said something to offend you?

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

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              • elmoretundefined
                elmoret
                last edited by

                We have met, and I'm not offended, just trying to help.

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                • fcwiltundefined
                  fcwilt
                  last edited by

                  Hi,

                  Have you tried a different power supply?

                  Frederick

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

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

                    @fcwilt said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

                    Hi,

                    Have you tried a different power supply?

                    Frederick

                    Interesting thought. Although I've never seen anything other than normal voltage, even when I've been throwing my 4.5 Kg mass around at 300 + mm/sec for hours on end. So I'm struggling to see how it could be a PSU issue but I do have another, bigger, fan cooled (and therefore noisy) one that I can try.

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

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                    • dragonnundefined
                      dragonn
                      last edited by

                      I think bare copper wire can easier get covered with patina. The get "darker" over time, maybe this makes the connection not perfect?

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

                        @dragonn said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

                        I think bare copper wire can easier get covered with patina. The get "darker" over time, maybe this makes the connection not perfect?

                        But there is no way of getting around that. Even if the links were insulated between the terminal blocks, the insulation still has to be stripped back where they go into the block. It has to be bare copper to make a contact. In theory, the screws make an airtight seal on the copper where it makes contact which prevent oxidisation. In any case, as per my post of 1st November 20:20, I checked for signs of oxidation where the screws bite into the copper and there is none.

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

                        JoergS5undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JoergS5undefined
                          JoergS5 @deckingman
                          last edited by JoergS5

                          @deckingman I thought about your problems and I have no good ideas, but maybe these thoughts help:

                          The sudden, seldom problem:

                          • power shortage or current peak. Caused by mains power or by a household appliance that produces EMC. (My experience: a switch has already once killed a lamp). Maybe too short to be in the protocol.

                          The regular problem:

                          • measuring temperaturs of the components and finding elements too hot or too cold, with a laser pointered temperature gauge. But then comparable information of a 100% working Duet would be valuable to decide. (My experience: the plug on my laptop gets warm when the contact is not good.)
                          deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • deckingmanundefined
                            deckingman @JoergS5
                            last edited by

                            @joergs5 Thanks for taking the time but maybe something got lost in translation.

                            The "sudden seldom" problem is something related to I2C errors. It's only happened 3 times in the last 4 weeks or so. Also, it's only ever happened after homing but never in the middle of a print. I guess it could be something related to the mains supply but I have an extensive computer network including a NAS and media server, numerous switches and so forth, all running on the same circuit and no other devices have shown any unusual behaviour.

                            The "regular problem" is simply some sort of delay in the boot up time. It happens every time the Duet is powered up or reset after editing config g. In the former case (power up) everything is at ambient temperature.

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

                            JoergS5undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • JoergS5undefined
                              JoergS5 @deckingman
                              last edited by JoergS5

                              @deckingman Yes I missed and misunderstood some of your information.

                              At least you don't have damaged prints from your "sudden seldom" print. It's difficult to analyze a non-reproducible error.

                              In case of a delay error I would have thought of a reason like waiting for a component like Wifi, sensor or protocol feedback. Maybe a functionality in firmware and waiting for timeout (or delay, waiting e.g. for fan speed up) because it is not present or not behaving as expected. I don't know the debugger/profiler possibilites of the Eclipse development environment enough, but there should be a tool to analyze your startup exactly.

                              deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • deckingmanundefined
                                deckingman @JoergS5
                                last edited by

                                @joergs5 Yes. One thing it does is a sort of double start up, as if it starts and then resets a couple of seconds later. David (DC42) has said that this is not normal and there will be a change in the next RC firmware which might fix it.

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

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                                • deckingmanundefined
                                  deckingman
                                  last edited by

                                  Sorry to resurrect this old thread but I've just experienced the second issue that I reported in my opening post. That is to say, I turned the printer on and ran my normal homing macro and noticed long pauses between commands. Ignoring this, I started a print and had the exact same issues - it would print a few moves, then pause for several seconds, then print few more. I aborted the print, cycled the power and everything worked as normal.

                                  This only happens once every few months so it's a bugger to track down. I did have the forethought to run M122 while it was printing and pausing. Here it is:
                                  ...........................................................................................................
                                  M122
                                  === Diagnostics ===
                                  RepRapFirmware for Duet 2 WiFi/Ethernet version 2.02RC4(RTOS) running on Duet Ethernet 1.0 or 1.01 + DueX5
                                  Board ID: 08DAM-999TL-MQ4S8-6J9FA-3SJ6K-95B7W
                                  Used output buffers: 1 of 20 (18 max)
                                  === RTOS ===
                                  Static ram: 27476
                                  Dynamic ram: 99268 of which 0 recycled
                                  Exception stack ram used: 512
                                  Never used ram: 3816
                                  Tasks: NETWORK(ready,400) HEAT(blocked,1176) MAIN(running,3840) IDLE(ready,200)
                                  Owned mutexes:
                                  === Platform ===
                                  Last reset 00:20:59 ago, cause: power up
                                  Last software reset at 2018-12-05 11:36, reason: User, spinning module GCodes, available RAM 4044 bytes (slot 3)
                                  Software reset code 0x0003 HFSR 0x00000000 CFSR 0x00000000 ICSR 0x0441f000 BFAR 0xe000ed38 SP 0xffffffff Task 0x4e49414d
                                  Error status: 0
                                  Free file entries: 9
                                  SD card 0 detected, interface speed: 20.0MBytes/sec
                                  SD card longest block write time: 15.6ms, max retries 0
                                  MCU temperature: min 32.1, current 32.8, max 34.5
                                  Supply voltage: min 24.3, current 24.5, max 24.7, under voltage events: 0, over voltage events: 0, power good: yes
                                  Driver 0: standstill, SG min/max 0/320
                                  Driver 1: standstill, SG min/max 0/291
                                  Driver 2: standstill, SG min/max 0/1023
                                  Driver 3: standstill, SG min/max 0/279
                                  Driver 4: standstill, SG min/max 0/287
                                  Driver 5: standstill, SG min/max 0/164
                                  Driver 6: standstill, SG min/max not available
                                  Driver 7: standstill, SG min/max 0/1023
                                  Driver 8: standstill, SG min/max 0/1023
                                  Driver 9: standstill, SG min/max not available
                                  Date/time: 2019-01-11 15:02:50
                                  Cache data hit count 4294967295
                                  Slowest loop: 245.51ms; fastest: 29.15ms
                                  I2C nak errors 0, send timeouts 66285, receive timeouts 0, finishTimeouts 66285
                                  === Move ===
                                  Hiccups: 0, StepErrors: 0, LaErrors: 0, FreeDm: 165, MinFreeDm: 115, MaxWait: 269067ms, Underruns: 0, 0
                                  Scheduled moves: 194, completed moves: 179
                                  Bed compensation in use: none
                                  Bed probe heights: 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
                                  === Heat ===
                                  Bed heaters = 0 -1 -1 -1, chamberHeaters = -1 -1
                                  Heater 0 is on, I-accum = 0.3
                                  Heater 1 is on, I-accum = 0.5
                                  === GCodes ===
                                  Segments left: 0
                                  Stack records: 2 allocated, 0 in use
                                  Movement lock held by null
                                  http is idle in state(s) 0
                                  telnet is idle in state(s) 0
                                  file is idle in state(s) 0
                                  serial is idle in state(s) 0
                                  aux is idle in state(s) 0
                                  daemon is idle in state(s) 0
                                  queue is idle in state(s) 0
                                  autopause is idle in state(s) 0
                                  Code queue is empty.
                                  === Network ===
                                  Slowest loop: 221.69ms; fastest: 0.03ms
                                  Responder states: HTTP(0) HTTP(0) HTTP(0) HTTP(0) FTP(0) Telnet(0) Telnet(0)
                                  HTTP sessions: 1 of 8
                                  Interface state 5, link 100Mbps full duplex
                                  ...............................................................................................................
                                  Nothing leaps out at me and I don't see the I2C errors that I've had in the past but maybe someone else can spot something.

                                  May it's a "red herring" but it seems to happen when I haven'y used the printer for some time. In this case, I have been away for about 5 weeks.

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

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                                  • whosrdaddyundefined
                                    whosrdaddy
                                    last edited by

                                    @deckingman said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

                                    I2C nak errors 0, send timeouts 66285, receive timeouts 0, finishTimeouts 66285

                                    You definitely have an issue with sending I2C commands to your Duex5 according to this output...

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                                    • dc42undefined
                                      dc42 administrators
                                      last edited by

                                      Please upgrade to firmware 2.02. The I2C driver has been completely rewritten since the 2.02RC version that you are using.

                                      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

                                      deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • deckingmanundefined
                                        deckingman @dc42
                                        last edited by

                                        @dc42 said in I think my Duet and/or Duex5 is/are dying:

                                        ................ The I2C driver has been completely rewritten since the 2.02RC version that you are using.

                                        Oh really? Since RC4? I must have missed that.

                                        Thanks - I'll give it a try.

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

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                                        • deckingmanundefined
                                          deckingman
                                          last edited by

                                          Quick update on this.

                                          I won't go into the second problem - that is to do with I2C errors and since I started this thread, numerous other threads on have appeared on that topic. I can say that since I installed the resistors mentioned in one of those other threads, the problem has thus far not manifested itself. Having said that, I have had some health issues (me not the printer) so haven't done much printing for a couple of weeks.

                                          I think I've fixed the first problem though. This was the board and/or web interface taking 4 to 10 seconds to initialise after power on or re-boot. It turns out that I wasn't using a fixed IP address as I thought. No doubt this will be obvious to people who understand these things, but it wasn't obvious to an old retired mechanical engineer like me.

                                          My router (BT Hub 6) has the facility to always use the same IP address. To my way of thinking, that meant a fixed IP address, but obviously I was wrong. I guess it means that when the board first initialises, if the IP address isn't set on the board, then it will negotiate with the hub. By setting the switch on the hub, it just means that it will always allocate the same IP address but it doesn't by pass the negotiating process. So in one sense it is fixed, but in another sense it isn't. Anyway, I simply set the IP address in M552 to the same as was being allocated by the hub and now it boots as quickly as I ever remember it doing.

                                          Interestingly, the Hub still reports the IP address as being allocated by DHCP. Maybe that's a bug in the Hub firmware (it wouldn't be the first by all accounts). Maybe if I set the IP address to something less that 63, which is outside the DHCP range, then it might correctly report that it hasn't been allocated by DHCP. I don't really care because the problem is fixed.

                                          The only thing I wonder about is why the problem started and why it seemed to be getting worse. I guess that's just down to me having more and more devices connected to the network.

                                          Anyway and in summary for anyone else having slow boot issues with a Duet Ethernet, try using a fixed IP address in M552.

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

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

                                            @deckingman

                                            Most routers have the ability to reserve a fixed IP address for a device by establishing, within the router, a fixed relationship between the devices MAC address (which a unique value hardwired into each device) and the desired IP address.

                                            There is not one name for this feature nor a standardized place in the router setup for this feature.

                                            "IP reservation" is one name you might see. In others they call it a "static IP" which can be confusing because the term static IP usually refers to setting a fixed IP address within the device itself, not within the router.

                                            I found a reference to a BT Hub 6 manual but it was very limited.

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

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