Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 15, 2016 08:05AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 15, 2016 01:29PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 15, 2016 03:06PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 17, 2016 08:15PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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the_digital_dentist
by using a linear guide instead of the 1/2" rails I started with
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 17, 2016 08:30PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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cozmicray
Belts on a CoreXY
are NOT structural tensioning devices!
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 01:51PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 02:28PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
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lkcl
i was aiming to get down to only 36mm (or so) on each edge of a 214mm printbed, for a total width of 280mm. i've not managed that - i have however got it down to 305mm total width. i honestly don't feel that linear rails would help achieve that kind of design goal: they're off-the-shelf parts that i'd not be able to alter.
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 05:57PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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cozmicray
It is not a good idea to think your going to 300mm of printing travel out of a 300mm guide rail
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lkcl
i was aiming to get down to only 36mm (or so) on each edge of a 214mm printbed, for a total width of 280mm.
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 06:33PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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the_digital_dentist
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lkcl
i was aiming to get down to only 36mm (or so) on each edge of a 214mm printbed, for a total width of 280mm. i've not managed that - i have however got it down to 305mm total width. i honestly don't feel that linear rails would help achieve that kind of design goal: they're off-the-shelf parts that i'd not be able to alter.
I don't understand - what does vertical vs horizontal arrangement of a pair of guide rails have to do with the length of the rails?
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Linear guides (and round guide rails) can be cut to any length you want. A cutoff wheel on a grinder will do the job.
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Is 280mm the target width of the whole printer
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The travel you get is the length of the rail(s) minus the width of whatever is moving on them. If the extruder carriage is 100mm wide, and you need 218 mm of travel, your rail(s) need to be 318 mm long.
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If your target is getting a 214 mm wide bed into a 280 mm wide printer, the rails aren't the issue, the width of the extruder carriage is. Use a bowden extruder and mount only the hot end on the carriage to minimize its width.
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 08:31PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 18, 2016 09:50PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 21, 2016 08:00AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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the_digital_dentist
I just noticed in a previous post that you're using 6 mm bearings and guide rails.
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Will a few extra mm in printer size really matter so much?
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Off the shelf bed heaters are typically 200 mm square. Do you need the extra 14 mm in the bed?
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 21, 2016 08:38AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,798 |
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY April 22, 2016 09:25AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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the_digital_dentist
I looked at the specs on that heater- on the good side it has holes to allow 3 point leveling. On the bad side it looks like it only dissipates about 100 W. The description says it's flat enough to print on directly, without adding a glass plate, but unless it's quite thick and preferably cast aluminum, I have doubts about that. If you put glass on top of it, it may never reach 105C to print ABS (but maybe you don't intend to print ABS, so it won't matter). Other people must be using these heaters. Do they get hot enough and in a reasonable amount of time? Are they actually flat enough to print on? Do they stay flat when heated?
This heater has about 0.25 W/cm^2 power density. I run 0.5 W/cm^2 in my printer and it get to 105C in about 5 minutes (heating up a massive aluminum plate, 317 x 305 x 6.35 mm).
Re: Vertical X-Rods vs Horizontal X-Rods in CoreXY May 18, 2016 02:23PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |