Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 12:06PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 87 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 12:48PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 439 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 01:32PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 87 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 01:59PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 439 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 02:34PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 87 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 03:24PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 439 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 29, 2014 03:51PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 87 |
Quote
Ralph.Hilton
I think any engineer who knows their stuff does that too :-) I would ask as the first question - what do you want to make with the printer?
You don't need great expense to get zero Z wobble so there is a sweet spot between healthy over-engineering and overkill.
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 30, 2014 11:20AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 869 |
While it's fine to have a preference, why do you have that preference? Just aesthetics of having them all match? Most would give up some aesthetics for better quality and faster speeds.Quote
RC-CnC
Z axis with belts is going to require to level the Z axis every time you power up the machine also when you remove power to the steppers the z axis can fall from the weight. I'd rather not mix belt and acme rod, just my preference.
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 30, 2014 11:26AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 87 |
Quote
cdru
While it's fine to have a preference, why do you have that preference? Just aesthetics of having them all match? Most would give up some aesthetics for better quality and faster speeds.Quote
RC-CnC
Z axis with belts is going to require to level the Z axis every time you power up the machine also when you remove power to the steppers the z axis can fall from the weight. I'd rather not mix belt and acme rod, just my preference.
It all comes down the mechanical advantage of the system. For how they typically are used for 3D printers, belts move faster where acme rods can hold position better. Presuming a XY bed design, the X and Y axes move far more than the Z axis, so having faster movements that don't need a lot of holding power is desired, where the Z-axis needs to be able to hold position very well but doesn't need to move fast, so acme/threaded rod gets used there.
Re: Belts for Z Axis July 31, 2014 12:34PM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 2,947 |
FFF Settings Calculator | Gcode post processors | Geometric Object Deposition Tool Blog |
Tantillus.org | Mini Printable Lathe | How NOT to install a Pololu driver |
Re: Belts for Z Axis August 03, 2014 06:32AM |
Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 227 |
Re: Belts for Z Axis August 03, 2014 07:17AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 1,381 |
Quote
Sublime
You would also have the issue of the driver not being made to run two motors which causes the microstepping to not work as designed.
Re: Belts for Z Axis August 03, 2014 12:17PM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 2,947 |
Quote
A2
Quote
Sublime
You would also have the issue of the driver not being made to run two motors which causes the microstepping to not work as designed.
Can you provide more details about the disadvantages of this, and how it's configured. I've read this a few times but I don't have clear notes about it.
Tks.
FFF Settings Calculator | Gcode post processors | Geometric Object Deposition Tool Blog |
Tantillus.org | Mini Printable Lathe | How NOT to install a Pololu driver |