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    Firmware 2.03beta2 available

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    Firmware installation
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    • gavatron3000undefined
      gavatron3000
      last edited by

      Your homeall macro has no endstops defined

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      • gideonundefined
        gideon
        last edited by

        it has always worked on the firmware 2.01,
        I also do not use an end stop just Sensorless Homing
        or do I have to put a little bit in the firware version in 2.03 "?

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        • gavatron3000undefined
          gavatron3000
          last edited by

          M574 X0 Y0 means no endstops
          My sensor less setup is as follows
          M574 X1 Y1 S3; X and y min endstops are sensorless

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          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @gideon
            last edited by

            @gideon said in Firmware 2.03beta2 available:

            I get 1 error when I want to print

            10-3-2019 15:26:18:: FIRMWARE_NAME: RepRapFirmware for Duet 2 WiFi / Ethernet FIRMWARE_VERSION: 2.03beta2 + 1 ELECTRONICS: Duet WiFi 1.02 or later FIRMWARE_DATE: 2019-02-23b1
            Canceled printing file 0: /gcodes/Body1.gcode, print time was 0h 2m
            Error: G0 / G1: insufficient axes homed

            This one is covered in the troubleshooting FAQ on the wiki.

            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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            • gideonundefined
              gideon
              last edited by

              @gavatron3000 said in Firmware 2.03beta2 available:

              M574 X1 Y1 S3

              thanks

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              • rflullingundefined
                rflulling
                last edited by rflulling

                I know I am late to this party. I have a feeling that familiar issue of the M574 command will bite me when I update too. -"M574 X2 Y1 Z1 S0" currently being the magic configuration for a Wanhao i3 Mini running 2.02(RTOS) (2018-12-24b1). I will also have to test the "M574 X2 Y0 Y0 S0" which has previously produced identical results for this hardware configuration. Perhaps that has changed under 2.03

                Will chime in further if there are any issues to provide feed back on. Only doing update to participate in a community action.

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                • dc42undefined
                  dc42 administrators
                  last edited by

                  The meaning of existing M574 commands hasn't changed unless you were accidentally using the new C parameter.

                  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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                  • kazolarundefined
                    kazolar
                    last edited by

                    David, since RC6 I've been having i2c issues. Or more specifically they've gotten worse so that the the firmware is not usable. RC5 shows timeouts when I do M122. (When I get into this condition where the duet is very slow to respond to move commands etc) I checked out forum posts regarding i2c issues and I am not seeing errors, but I am seeing timeouts in RC5, with RC6 the end stops on the Duex5 stop responding after a few hours. I checked my wiring again, and I have short ferule terminated wires between the ground terminals -- basically using the dual wire ferrule which came with duet/duex5. The boards are mounted with the duet at the top of the enclosure and the duex5 under it with 15mm of spacing, and fans blowing across them. When I get into the i2c timeout condition a pure reboot (pressing stop on the screen) doesn't fix it, I have to power down the board, and restart.

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                    • Vetiundefined
                      Veti
                      last edited by

                      @kazolar said in Firmware 2.03beta2 available:

                      duex5

                      https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/7269/duet-sometimes-really-slow-i2c-error-or/2

                      The most common reason for I2C errors is that you don't have a short thick ground wire between the VIN terminal blocks of the Duet and the DueX.

                      dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • kazolarundefined
                        kazolar
                        last edited by

                        I checked that again. I have a beefy wire there, but I can go up a gauge. I also noticed that the ground wire has things running next to it, so I'm suspecting some interference. So my current plan is to move to a different case with the boards side by side instead one on top of the other and a much beefier ground wire. Since pure reboot doesn't solve it, I'm leaning towards some electrical noise built up which clears up on power down.

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

                          We recently had a report from one of one OEMs that the cables from normally-open endstop switches connected to the endstop inputs on the DueX5 appeared to be picking up interference from extruder cables or elsewhere, and this was triggering I2C errors. So my current advice to users experiencing I2C errors is:

                          • Make sure there is a short thick ground wire between the VIN- terminals of the Duet and the DueX;
                          • Try adding the additional I2C pullup resistors that I already described;
                          • Don't connect normally-open endstop switches to the endstop inputs on the DueX (or if you must, use a 1K pullup resistor to +3.3V and preferably also an RC filter).

                          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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                          • dc42undefined
                            dc42 administrators @kazolar
                            last edited by

                            @kazolar said in Firmware 2.03beta2 available:

                            I checked that again. I have a beefy wire there, but I can go up a gauge. I also noticed that the ground wire has things running next to it, so I'm suspecting some interference. So my current plan is to move to a different case with the boards side by side instead one on top of the other and a much beefier ground wire. Since pure reboot doesn't solve it, I'm leaning towards some electrical noise built up which clears up on power down.

                            The beefy ground wire needs to be short as well.

                            Mounting the boards back-to-back is a good option, because it makes for easy fan cooling and it allows you to use a short thick ground wire between the two VIN terminal blocks.

                            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

                            kazolarundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • kazolarundefined
                              kazolar
                              last edited by

                              @dc42 so I'll leave the case be. That's easier obviously. I have very good cooling, CPU reported temperature doesn't go above 27c. I'll replace the ground wire, though it's at least an 18 gauge silicone insulated wire, but I can go to 16? Or 14. Wire is short, basically just long enough to jump between the boards. And will add the resistors as you suggested in the other post. It's rather curious that i2c timeouts (not errors although not sure if it's a difference) don't start until several hours of operation. I was calibrating my extruder offsets and checking my z probe etc so I was running homing routine multiple times and lead screw compensation routine,I am using normally closed end stops, I've had issues with normally open in the past. Hopefully I can resolve this and move to the latest firmware since I am presently stuck on rc5 since i2c is a bit more resilient there.

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                              • gavatron3000undefined
                                gavatron3000
                                last edited by

                                18 gauge is only around 0.8mm² the wiki says around 2.5mm² is recommended which is around 13-14 gauge

                                Dont know if it's a pattern yet but I've read about a few issues with the duex and all those people seem to be running solid core cable.

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                                • kazolarundefined
                                  kazolar
                                  last edited by kazolar

                                  Thanks, will bump up to 14 gauge. I'm using stranded wires crimped in ferrules. I'm guessing, the insufficiently thick ground would the source of my issues. I'm not sure solid core can be crimped, or tightened adequately.

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                                  • gavatron3000undefined
                                    gavatron3000
                                    last edited by

                                    Yes completely agree

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                                    • kazolarundefined
                                      kazolar @dc42
                                      last edited by

                                      @dc42 I installed a 14 gauge ground wire -- while at it also did the VIN wire. Both are 1/2 the length they were before, couldn't get shorter than this now. I left the 16 gauge(it was 16 not 18 before) going to the PSU, it's coupled in a ferrule together with a very short 14 gauge jumper to duex5. The printer itself with everything on never pulls more than 200w, since my I'm using an AC bed, 16 gauge wire has not been an issue for 24v DC power.

                                      Now the main question is, how do I test the i2c bus for reliability. Under normal conditions it takes a long time for me to start seeing timeouts, is there a test routine, something that would send a bunch of data on i2c which you would expect to produce some errors if the wiring was at issue (I don't mind running some custom firmware to bang on the i2c bus).

                                      Thanks again.

                                      dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • SMK2019undefined
                                        SMK2019
                                        last edited by

                                        Will do later today.

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                                        • dc42undefined
                                          dc42 administrators @kazolar
                                          last edited by dc42

                                          @kazolar said in Firmware 2.03beta2 available:

                                          @dc42 I installed a 14 gauge ground wire -- while at it also did the VIN wire. Both are 1/2 the length they were before, couldn't get shorter than this now. I left the 16 gauge(it was 16 not 18 before) going to the PSU, it's coupled in a ferrule together with a very short 14 gauge jumper to duex5. The printer itself with everything on never pulls more than 200w, since my I'm using an AC bed, 16 gauge wire has not been an issue for 24v DC power.

                                          Now the main question is, how do I test the i2c bus for reliability. Under normal conditions it takes a long time for me to start seeing timeouts, is there a test routine, something that would send a bunch of data on i2c which you would expect to produce some errors if the wiring was at issue (I don't mind running some custom firmware to bang on the i2c bus).

                                          Thanks again.

                                          You could try sending repeated commands to change the speed of the DueX fans. Each one will require an I2C transaction.

                                          Here's another possibility: pick one of the DueX servo outputs that corresponds to an unused heater channel, connect the servo control pin of that output to the cathode of a small signal diode, and connect the anode of that diode to one of the DueX endstop inputs. Then use M307 to disable that heater, and M42 to set up 50% PWM on that servo output at a low frequency. Every time the endstop input toggles, the DueX will signal a change to the Duet, and the Duet will do an I2C transaction to find out what changed.

                                          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

                                          kazolarundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Edgars Batnaundefined
                                            Edgars Batna
                                            last edited by

                                            Is there a certain resistance that shouldn't be exceeded on the ground connection between the boards? I've got really thick wires running from both boards to the power supply and I measured the resistance to be somewhere around 0.4 Ohms. Since I get the errors extremely rarely, I added an additional, short but significantly thinner wire between the boards, which appeared to halve the resistance. Would this be good enough?

                                            dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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