Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 07, 2016 10:59PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 11:16AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 11:43AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 12:21PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 12:27PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 04:05PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 04:32PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 08, 2016 04:45PM |
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Check the code of Misan on github - he made a simple processing script, that can help you visualize the approach curve and tune PID using 6 keys.Quote
B4Me
Its kinda sadpid tuning is hard.. but then again, a good guide can help A LONG way !
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 09, 2016 03:51PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 14, 2016 04:06AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 14, 2016 06:28PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
o_lampe
I had second thoughts about the geared motors vs. direct drive.
To achieve the same amount of output torque the geared motor would have to turn faster and therefor would have the same inertia ( rotor mass x RPM ? )
So in theory the lower mass of the small rotor AND the friction of the gears would end up in a higher power consumption of the small motor.
Combine that with the smaller cooling surface of the small motor and problems are guaranteed.
This inertia problem occurs every time a motor starts or changes direction, which is pretty often...
Is my "math" correct or is rotor diameter also involved in the inertia equation? Then we would have to discuss small dia & long rotors vs. big dia & short rotors ( same motor weight )
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 15, 2016 05:53AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 17, 2016 02:23AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
o_lampe
I know the size of your motor/gearbox, but the motor spins much faster then a direct driven DC motor.
I was surprised to see the motor completely inserted in the housing. Would it be enough to push only the gearbox in the ( shorted ) housing?
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 17, 2016 02:43AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 17, 2016 12:40PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 17, 2016 07:45PM |
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Quote
rklauco
Not that I'd like to disagree, but your calculation is a bit wrong - NEMA17 shaft radius is 2.5mm (5mm diameter). However, it can spin (tested) up to 4000rpm.
For me, the biggest problem here is the price of the motor+encoder - I've got 5 of the motors for $7, but with no encoder. And that seems to be the major difference here
I'll do my tests - if a simple hall-effect sensor on the outside of the motor housing will not be enough to measure something - I'd love to have the motor as an extruder drive, when playing with it on 12V, I am unable to even slow down the shaft by hand, unbelievable torque for such a small housing.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 17, 2016 07:55PM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 12:27AM |
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Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 03:19AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
Andrey_SSh
Inertia moment:
J = 0.5 * m * R^2
Kinetic energy
E = 0.5 * J * w^2
Stepper:
R = 0.02 m
m = 0.26 kg
w = 100 rpm = 5 rad/c
J=0.000052
E=0.00065 J
Small DC:
R=0.005 m
m= 0.011 kg
w=10000 rpm=500 rad/c
J=0.00000014
E=0.0175 J
*(values are rough)
Small DC is more "inertial" then big stepper due to high speed.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 03:52AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 12:53PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
rklauco
I have a bit of an issue with the motor-to-shaft coupling. I am trying to come up with something different - like 5-to-3mm reduction and using directly MK7 gear. However, I do not have currently the needed material, so I'll be doing some shopping this afternoon.
Quote
rklauco
While the IR sensor is probably possible, I don't want to drill into the motor. My other driving idea is to glue a magnet on top of the MK7 bolt and use something like the ASM sensor for magnetic rotation. Or I can still use another circular encoder wheels with huge resolution and quadrature encoder as I did for Z axis - there I have resolution of ~3000 impulses per 1mm of movement, that should be plenty for extruder
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 01:18PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
Interesting - I've never seen drive like that. I have an idea how to use it, but...Quote
ipcalit
Another possibility is to engage a larger rubber-coated wheel/gear in a similar way with the belt-driven designs that recently circulated. I don't like adding other wheels, but this could to drive the filament without compression (see attached). The drawback is a more complicated design and parts that are hard to source.
Maybe I have a bit different motor, but on mine the distance from the shaft with the first wheel and the "first floor" of the gearbox is very (VERY) small - like 1mm tops. And half of the "free" area is taken by additional gear on the right side of the first wheel.Quote
ipcalit
If you're thinking glue, then the gearbox could be removed from the motor (just two screws) and just glue a tiny magnet directly on top of the driving gear of the motor. Put it back together and use the space in the gearbox to get the sensor right next to that magnet.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 01:35PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 02:42PM |
Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 1,236 |
Quote
ipcalit
The biggest issue would be interfacing with the controller and typical 8bit controllers might have a hard time counting the steps. I didn't hear anything yet from any Smoothieboard experts regarding the use of the hardware QEI feature of the LPC17xx.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 02:56PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
I'm not really sure I follow.Quote
bobc
I had a look at the schematic here [smoothieware.org] and P1[20] is connected to LED3, and P1[23] is spare, both are routed to headers.
Might need to sacrifice an LED but it looks doable.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 03:08PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Here is an older attempt for a belt-driven extruder:Quote
rklauco
Interesting - I've never seen drive like that. I have an idea how to use it, but...Quote
ipcalit
Another possibility is to engage a larger rubber-coated wheel/gear in a similar way with the belt-driven designs that recently circulated. I don't like adding other wheels, but this could to drive the filament without compression (see attached). The drawback is a more complicated design and parts that are hard to source.
Friction doesn't have to be predictable as you are engaging a long section of filament over a quarter of the wheel diameter. The PFTE tubing depicted in orange presses the filament against the wheel and guides/bends it along the way. The design is still very close to direct drive as you're not using the wheel to gain torque, just to gain grip.Quote
rklauco
First of all - the friction will be unpredictable - if there is just a small problem on the filament path, it will slip.
Second of all - I was previously using some cheaper PLAs that would break from time to time being bent in such a way. The drive gear would have to have serious diameter to compensate for that and I think that would remove to 30g tag from your thread name
Quote
rklauco
Maybe I have a bit different motor, but on mine the distance from the shaft with the first wheel and the "first floor" of the gearbox is very (VERY) small - like 1mm tops. And half of the "free" area is taken by additional gear on the right side of the first wheel.Quote
ipcalit
If you're thinking glue, then the gearbox could be removed from the motor (just two screws) and just glue a tiny magnet directly on top of the driving gear of the motor. Put it back together and use the space in the gearbox to get the sensor right next to that magnet.
It's difficult to describeAnd my phone cannot make macro picture
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 03:15PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
rklauco
I'm not really sure I follow.Quote
bobc
I had a look at the schematic here [smoothieware.org] and P1[20] is connected to LED3, and P1[23] is spare, both are routed to headers.
Might need to sacrifice an LED but it looks doable.
As I see the capabilities of the chip, it can only read 1 encoder. You will need 2-4 (depends on which axes/extruder do you want to modify).
One quadrature encoder in HW will not help you much.
Am I mistaken?
Is there some dark magic how one can connect more than 1 encoder to the chip?
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 05:48PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
Wow, that could be interesting.Quote
ipcalit
If anybody has one of these, it would be great to compare the diameter of the drive gear with the Mk7 or Mk8 commonly in use. Seems like a run-of-the-mill 18T gear, which could be replaced by one brass insert for M3 and some epoxy. No bearings are used on the shaft of the motor, which could lead to premature failure.
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 18, 2016 06:40PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 181 |
Re: Pololu geared DC motor 30g prototype extruder May 19, 2016 12:00AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 78 |
Quote
rklauco
Wow, that could be interesting.Quote
ipcalit
If anybody has one of these, it would be great to compare the diameter of the drive gear with the Mk7 or Mk8 commonly in use. Seems like a run-of-the-mill 18T gear, which could be replaced by one brass insert for M3 and some epoxy. No bearings are used on the shaft of the motor, which could lead to premature failure.
I wonder how the plastic gears for the 90deg. turn work - I would expect them to wear out quickly. Maybe not so much on a pen, but on a printer working with much longer prints...