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    Posts made by oliverracing

    • RE: What firmware version are you using?

      Currently running 2.05 on both my machines, but plan on switching to whatever is latest at the time when changing the kinematics of the portable printer (currently polar swing-arm but it's a bit flexy, changing it to corexy).

      Main printer is hooked up to looks of external stuff and using outputs for things that they probably shouldn't be so will have to rethink before upgrading as that's a big job and it's currently working!

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • Is there a classifieds? Wanting to try a duex 5 for an idea

      Long story short, I'm moving house and need to change how one of my printers will work where I'm moving. I'm currently using a Duet Wifi for the majority of the functions with a Arduino board handling the chamber heating and vent control along with nozzle wipe stepper triggered by a nozzle activated limit switch on the ramps (although currently not operational as failed 10% of the time).

      From this I think switching out the standalone Arduino board for a Duex integrated with the Duet wifi as this will be the best option as can control remotely and watch via webcam as can't be set next to it watching it like a hawk as I can currently when working but was wondering with the release of the Duet 3 boards, if a few people were wanting to offload old Duex boards as trying to stretch the pennies at the moment? - UK based if that makes a difference!

      Feel free to delete if this is banned (sorry) but couldn't spot if there was a classifieds or if it was banned or not!

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: 3500 hours on my printer now skipping steps like crazy

      I'd vote mechanical too but Im pretty sure i have managed to partially demagnetise a micro stepper before. I did this by running 1200ma through one designed for 250ma, but it got so hot to do this the mounts had also melted (cf-nylon). Not sure how you'd do this on a duet with anything other than a microstepper though.

      I'm guessing 120degrees is F not C but have they possibly overheated anytime in the past?

      posted in Duet Hardware and wiring
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: See live heater PWM duty cycle

      @dc42 Thanks - that's perfect, I'll have a play and see where I am!

      @baird1fa Ok thanks that'd good info, Yeah the large surface area will probably be a factor but will be insulating it in a similar way to the E3D version so hopefully that will reduce that issue. Yeah, that Typhoon is crazy!

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • See live heater PWM duty cycle

      I'm having a play with making my own version of something similar to a SuperVolcano hotend (with a fair few tweaks of my own) to push my flow rate up a bit when making large car parts and want to see if I can find what the live PWM/duty cycle being used for the hotend to help judge heater element power requirement, idea is to test the setup with what I've got and uprate the heater if I'm going above 80% duty cycle.

      The hotend will be run in a ~60C heated chamber and I've got a few 40W and 50W heaters that my very rough maths says the 40W should be absolutely plenty, but I'm trying to work out why E3D spec a 80W heater! Will be printing ASA/ABS/PA so not hotter than 280C, and can't see me pushing above 60mm^3/s. I suspect the silly heater is due to the high top-end heat they spec but also know they do their research and make great kit!

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: preferred design for tool changing mating plate

      Nice idea about using the geared locking mechanism. I've been struggling myself to work out how on earth to so something like this but keep it compact as soon as I add the motor with enough torque it's all of a sudden massive.

      posted in 3D Printing General Chat
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      @bondus yeah, 90% of what I print gets smothered in plastic filler and painted or is a no visible part for my kit car so that final bit of precision really isn't high priority for me.

      Thinking about it I can't think of any parts I've printed that are "show" parts.

      Plan is today is to do a test on a single wall cube to see if I can push the acceleration as high as possible (already know the max flow rate and therefore speed of my extruder) Will test near and far from the pivot as not 100% sure if the beam inertia will play a bigger part than the "wobble" from the flex at far reaches

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      @bondus yeah, was £6 and saved 200g+ on the swingarm so worth it.

      About 1.5mm drop end to end although the first 0.5mm (measured by eye) is in the section between the pivot end stop and the edge of bed (50mm) so seems to preload a bit and then not increase much. I do wonder if a machined aluminium pivot would be worth it but then i think this has cost me less than £40 to covert and I'm like nah!

      1mm over 30cm is something I'm very happy about (version No.1 was 8mm) and is around the tolerances of the scrap aluminium I used for the bed (being a cheapskate as had it already and was flat to a steel ruler) and with the peizo leveling prints great.

      Direct drive was the only option for the filaments I use and might look into lighter solutions but at the moment it's fine and I haven't noticed and ghosting from it

      I have just printed a new centre console for my car (kit car) so very happy with the results, as that's the reason I have a printer!

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      @Phaedrux I guess I could but the 1st arm would need a way of getting out the way as currently it would hit. Also it'd definitely need new firmware!

      I have looked at (and I'm looking at) a tool change method as don't think it'd be too tricky to implement as there's a large unused area off to the right when looking at the machine. I reckon a magnetic based system could work with dual hotends and wouldn't require a duex.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      Got a quick video whilst doing a semi test print on the V2 of the printer. Carbon swingarm, NEMA23 and lighter hotend all come together to work really well - youtube link (using up some terrible old filament to make a spool drawer set, colour change via a pause and swap filament)

      polarv2.jpg
      polarv2a.jpg

      Printing with a 1mm nozzle/ 0.5mm layer so approaching max flow rate of the volcano at ~50mm/s in that video and reaches vmax pretty quickly which is nice as only way to get quicker from there is a supervolcano! In the purpose of testing I am going to try upping the acceleration to the point where the ringing becomes noticeable but other than that I'm very happy and now gonna get on with other projects.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      @Nemesis1782 Yeah, there are a few benefits over other formats apart from the need for fewer parts and coolness but for me those were two of the biggest driving factors.

      Other pluses to this design were that I have a fairly limited space for this printer to live (60cm60cm50cm) but will hopefully be moving in a couple of years to somewhere I can give it more space, so this would with only a small change to the mechanics (increase the sweep of the arm) and firmware be able to print a 55cm radius 2/3 circle assuming I can make a bed that big, going for a nicely ratioed rectangular area of 64x38cm which is pretty impressive for a printer so compact.

      As a very rough indication of useable area of the printer I am using the filled orange square at the moment but the current unchanged mechanics can reach the grey area (if no wall in the way) It would be a small change to the mechanics to be able to add the tan area (only needing a new pivot piece) which would in theory allow the non filled green area. Doing this would leave the bed without an edge on the y=0 axis that would require either a bit more slicer trickery or the ability to move the axis (x,y,z) relative to the polar coordinates. Either that or a plugin to modify the gcode after slicing?
      printshap1.png

      Brother currently asleep from a nightshift so can't really do a test video (it resonates through his wall), but the new swingarm (1/2 the weight, 3x as stiff + adjustable to allow squaring up) and NEMA23 powering it is a massive improvement and seems to match where I had my old cartesian in terms of speed and quality. Not yet tuned speed and accelerations as suspect ringing could be pretty bad it high jerk and acceleration values but only one way to find out!

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      So another nightly update as did end up making some changes today, plus keeping this as a build diary for me or anyone else that may wish to copy.

      So stiffening up the pivot made a massive difference, the 3-4mm of play was causing the hotend to bounce on contact at speed and therefore skip sometimes. One issue this has revealed is the pivot is also non adjustable/preload able so sags a little which so a bit annoying, but skew compensation will be my friend to get an adjustable version printed. (Already tested as works pretty well. I've also found a lighter stepper on the drawer ( 132g Vs 254g) that I'll chuck on the extruder in the morning as that should improve it too.

      It's now at a point where printing within 350mm of the pivot excedes my old (and admittedly worn out) Cartesian printer so really looking forward to where I can take this, with a higher torque swingarm stepper I should be great right to the furthest reach.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      @Phaedrux Yeah, I'd did chuck a Bowden setup on it to see if that improved anything but there wasn't a massive improvement near the pivot as the MOI of the swingarm/beam seems the be a much greater issue than that of the hotend assembly, due the swingarm moving much quicker when the hotend is nearer the pivot. (Bad ringing near pivot) The precision/torque issue is then more apparent at longer reaches due to the arm deviating by as much as ~0.5mm when getting caught on a existing printed track, the Bowden did help slightly with this but not enough to keep with it at the moment. The hope is 3x more torque, double the resolution, improved stiffness and lighter beam will help massively.

      I also print flexible filaments fairly often and a 600mm Bowden (that's fairly curved at points) really doesn't work well with the softer filaments in my experience.

      I have considered the zesty nimble (or making something like it as like the challenge) or maybe a igus linear square drive along the swingarm powering the direct drive extruder but reckon that could be as heavy as a pancake stepper.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      So quick update... Swingarm resolution and torque would definitely benefit from being higher. Currently got a 1:30ish ratio on a 1.8 degree NEMA 17 but gonna swap in a 0.9 degree NEMA 23 I've got in a box somewhere (after finding it) will probably have to change the gearbox a bit as the NEMA 23 has an 8mm shaft so will have a dig for a pulley to fit it. Also going to use double belts on the gearbox to swingarm to hopefully stiffen that link up a bit.

      This when tied with reducing the moment of inertia by replacing extruder stepper (45mm to 22mm NEMA 17) and beam, this will reduce it by about 45% (when hotend 1/2 way along swingarm) so hopefully by my maths with the increased torque this will allow accelerations of 5x what I currently can manage.

      While on the subject of stiffening up I'm going to add a bit of torsional stiffness to the mechanism as while there isn't much flex getting rid of what's there will definitely help.

      Will hopefully be able to do an update later this week as got some other projects I need to do in the meantime.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      Yeah it's odd but seems to work ok an efficient use of the parts I had. It wouldn't work trying to print quick with the current setup, but I use a 1mm nozzle so 50mms is my max print speed anyway.

      The both vslot are glued and tapped into the base so not going anywhere, plus there is a vslot wheel in the second piece to stop the rotation, this works well and was in the parts bin so easy to do on lockdown.

      The gearbox is 1:3 (20:60) and 1:10.2 (20:204). I might play with dropping the 20t drives to 16 to see if the added resolution is noticeable.

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Polar Swingarm printer

      It prints! (video)

      Very happy to have got it going and the ease of changing stuff from DWC2 really helped. I have had to do a bit of a tweak in Cura to get the correct build area but nothing silly, just blanking off the unprintable area.
      cura.PNG

      I've ordered a lighter swingarm (65g vs 265g) which should reduced the inertia of the beam which seems to be a bigger issue than the inertia of the hotend as the arm swings much faster when nearer the pivot. I will also get a smaller stepper for the hotend as currently using a fairly heavy duty one that's overkill with the 3:1 ratio.

      I am going to hold off on the metalic pivot pieces as reckon I can get a big improvement with a better designed version of what I'm already using with some cross bracing. Will update with progress!

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • Polar Swingarm printer

      So I asked a few months ago about what this kinematics would be classed as and David helpfully pointed out it was just a polar but moving the arm and not the bed.

      As I've been forced to take 3 weeks holiday by work due to the current Pandemic, so I thought I'd give it a go making one! Reusing all the hardware off my old printer, I have put this together...

      polarv1.jpg

      31*32cm build area but in theory with a bigger bed and enclosure could print a 50cm radius semicircle with very little changes to the mechanics.

      It's surprisingly stiff and has a ~30:1 ratio on the swingarm stepper so hopefully enough torque and resolution. If this works out I'll replace the 2020 of the swingarm with 20mm carbon tube so reduce the inertia and get some aluminium plate laser cut to replace the existing mechanism as that is the main source of flex.

      Now I've just taken a backup of my old settings and just about to dive into the firmware setup, I'll report back with how it goes!

      posted in My Duet controlled machine
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: What's this kinematics called?

      Ok, that should be fine although being able to do in the fireware would be great too, I'm just trying to take everything into account when doing the mechanical design so will add in adjustability to the offset.

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: What's this kinematics called?

      So got another question that's stumping me.

      Will the nozzle have to be directly on the axis (so move directly to/away from the pivot) or will the kinematics he able to handle an offset? I've done a few paper drawings of the effect of an offset and I get a skewed shape so it'll need to be calculated in the firmware if I'm right in thinking?

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing
    • RE: Crane Quad review (Because it uses a Maestro)

      Ouch, but yeah your review seems to echo everything else I've read about them. I very nearly bought in on the original Kickstarter and kicked myself I didn't but looking black seemed to have dodged a bullet!

      posted in General Discussion
      oliverracingundefined
      oliverracing