Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 06:41AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-pint leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 06:54AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 07:37AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 08:25AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 09:12AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 10:32AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 10:55AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 11:37AM |
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the_digital_dentist
I did something dumb about a year ago and made the nozzle crash into a print that was stuck to the bed. It bent the heat break which I was able to straighten and continue using, but I ordered a spare for just-in-case. So far I haven't had to use it.
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the_digital_dentist
If you wanted absolute protection against a crash for the hot-end, you could install screws to act as hard mechanical stops for the Z axis that would mechanically prevent the nozzle from ever actually touching the bed. You'd have to carefully level and zero the bed first, then adjust the stop screws to prevent the nozzle from ever touching the bed, which means adjusting them within 50-100 um or so. How many printers are so stable that the leveling and zeroing and the position of those stop screws would remain accurate for any length of time/number of prints? As solid as my printer is, I'm not sure I could make it work.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 11:45AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 11:57AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 01, 2016 06:45PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 02:31AM |
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the_digital_dentist
You can put in all the switches you want, but if the electronics fails to recognize the switches, bad things may happen. The only way to really protect the extruder from a head crash is to mechanically prevent the bed from moving high enough to hit the nozzle or prevent the nozzle moving low enough to hit the bed.
The same is true for the extruder and bed heaters. You can put in temperature sensors but if the controller malfunctions and doesn't read the sensor or ignores it, you could have excessive heating. The only real protection for the heaters is to use a bimetallic switch or thermal fuse mounted on the heated part that interrupts the current to the heater. Its hard to find such parts that are rated for hot-end type temperatures and hard to find parts rated for bed heater level currents, so most everyone does without that type of protection.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 07:30AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 07:55AM |
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the_digital_dentist
A failure is a failure, whether it's a loose or broken wire, or malfunctioning code. I don't know every possible reason (stray beta particles from radioactive decay in the uCs plastic packaging?), but controller boards occasionally behave contrary to their programming. Noise on the power or logic inputs can cause all sorts of odd behavior, and with a minimum of 4 motors in a printer, there are plenty of noise sources available. How many times have you seen problems caused by ground loops via USB between a printer and a host computer?
Most of the potential problems are dismissed as unlikely, and we pretend they don't exist, and most of the time it's OK, or we do things like twist motor leads to reduce the noise coupled to other lines. But if you really want your machine protected against every possible failure, you have to design the mechanism so it can't hurt itself under any mechanical, electrical, or thermal conditions. That's pretty hard to do.
In theory, there won't be any forces trying to move the bed sideways in a CoreXY printer. But vibration can do odd things. Your design has silicone "springs" on the screw heads supporting the bed plate. If you turn the leveling screws, there is friction between the silicone and the bed that will essentially wind up that spring which will take every opportunity to unwind. If the plate vibrates and those little springs unwind, will the plate remain in the same lateral position? I think it's a safer bet to prevent lateral motion by having the plate constrained at its corners or by holding it down with magnets, etc.
Never forget the dumb human factor. If you're moving the machine and turn it on its side without remembering to remove or secure the plate first, where is it going to end up? The only way I can transport my printer is to lay it on its side in my car, so I have to be careful to remove anything that might come loose (side panels, filament spool and holder, stray tools, etc.) when I turn it sideways.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 09:29AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 14,686 |
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 09:45AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 01:10PM |
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realthor
I am seriously thinking of implementing some sort of renishaw_probe-style hotend, so that any head-crash would just cut the power to the motors or something like that...
@dc42: ... can you post a pic or something (link?) about that? I am very curious...
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 02, 2016 03:39PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 07, 2016 11:50AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 07, 2016 01:16PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 07, 2016 01:21PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
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realthor
Yes, I understand and agree. I was wary about the silicone springiness but couldn't think of something else especially that silicone can be high temp and is also somewhat non-slippery. In a previous iteration I did have constraints at the corners but those are not possible anymore now after I have changed several things... I am still scratching my head for this as I am not completely happy with the bed support solution I have.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 07, 2016 01:41PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 07, 2016 06:53PM |
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the_digital_dentist
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realthor
Yes, I understand and agree. I was wary about the silicone springiness but couldn't think of something else especially that silicone can be high temp and is also somewhat non-slippery. In a previous iteration I did have constraints at the corners but those are not possible anymore now after I have changed several things... I am still scratching my head for this as I am not completely happy with the bed support solution I have.
What if you glued disc magnets to the top of the silicone pads and to the underside of the bed plate? The smooth magnetic discs would slip against each other when turning the leveling screws, preventing the silicone "unwinding" problem, and would keep the bed plate in place better than relying solely on gravity to do so.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 11, 2016 05:49AM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 11, 2016 01:02PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 11, 2016 03:53PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 11, 2016 04:35PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 11, 2016 05:31PM |
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Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 12, 2016 02:26PM |
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the_digital_dentist
The problem with schemes that use a switch to detect a head crash is the same that problem that causes the z=0 switch to be ignored. You can't rely on malfunctioning electronics to behave the way you want.
The problem with mechanical methods, such as allowing the head to tilt or have a spring(s) to allow the extruder/hot-end or bed to move out of the way is the limited range of motion they can provide.
The only guaranteed way to prevent hot-end damage is to physically stop the bed and extruder nozzle from moving close enough for the two to touch. That requires installing finely adjustable, sturdy mechanical stops for the Z axis. If you physically block contact, you're counting on the motor to slip and not tear any teeth off the drive belt if the axis is belt driven.
That prevents damage due to the nozzle crashing into the bed plate, but doesn't help with the nozzle crashing into a print or clip used to hold a glass plate on the bed.
I don't think there is a mechanism that can protect from all possible crashes without severely compromising print quality.
Re: Bed Stability: 3-point leveling should be in fact 2-point leveling and a fixed one June 12, 2016 04:46PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 1,671 |