Setting the Z Probe December 29, 2013 12:50PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 1,230 |
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 29, 2013 01:07PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,611 |
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 29, 2013 03:01PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 8 |
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 29, 2013 03:15PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 314 |
... I have the opposite issue. With say the G31 Z1.8 P656 command in my config file the Ormerod homes correctly, but due to variations presumably in the z height sensor or the ambient lighting, my probe is too high.Quote
eg setting G31 Z1.8 P656 means that is moves the Z axis down until the proximity sensor reads 656, and sets Z to 1.8mm, then moves down 1.8mm to Z=0. This is the homing sequence. If you haven't set these parameters, re-read the 'Setting the Z Probe' section of the 'Axis Compensation' instructions.
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 29, 2013 05:21PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,611 |
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 30, 2013 04:31AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 314 |
@Ian, many thanks for clarifying. Good point regarding the bed heating up.Quote
Ian
@Treth: If the Z homing is too variable, due to ambient light or some other issue, that's a problem, because consistency is what we're striving for, especially for the first layer. We'll be looking at improving the proximity sensor in the New Year. But yes, move the Z axis to the correct height, and set G92 Z0. The bed compensation should still be working - remember to load it before starting to print.
Generally, for *really* good first layers, it's worth setting the bed height with the bed at temperature; there's can be a bit of movement in the bed as it heats up.
Re: Setting the Z Probe December 30, 2013 04:38AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,659 |