NEW CoreXY Design May 09, 2016 08:23PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 120 |
Re: My CoreXY Design May 09, 2016 09:03PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,796 |
Anonymous User
Re: My CoreXY Design May 09, 2016 11:34PM |
Re: My CoreXY Design May 10, 2016 01:43PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 120 |
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 12, 2016 10:12AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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MatthewHall
My design has no belt cross in the CoreXY system, uses lead screws in the Z axis, has all the GT2 belts running inside the aluminum extrusions, uses 3d printed linear motion, and has everything contained inside a 6mm birch plywood frame except two Nema17 steppers.
Pretty good for $300.
Please comment, I want to do this right (unlike Replikeo)
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 12, 2016 10:16AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 12, 2016 02:14PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 651 |
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lkcl
...in a cardboard box
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 12, 2016 09:23PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 120 |
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 15, 2016 07:54AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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MatthewHall
Hi, I'm just wondering if it would be beneficial to tap the 2040 extrusions on the top by the motors. It might avoid the need for larger brackets, as I want to keep the build volume as big as possible.
Like this:
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 15, 2016 08:09AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
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FA-MAS
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lkcl
...in a cardboard box
That would be a valid comparison if all he were using for the frame were a thin wooden box.
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He's using properly sized, and connected extrusions. Plus unlike our designs (my portable design too), he has proper bracing across the top.
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Those plastic corner brackets where the idlers go could be less than ideal for rigidity though.
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If I were going for that design, I'd go with 20x60 or 20x80 for the back and sides of the top frame. That way you could at least have metal on metal contact at those front corners.
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 15, 2016 04:41PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 776 |
Re: NEW CoreXY Design May 16, 2016 02:42PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 651 |
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lkcl
wood is elastic, therefore it doesn't matter how much you use (unless it's 8in thick), it's going to flex. a cardboard box is a very good (simple, cheap, easy, quick) way to illustrate the issue i'm communicating.
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lkcl
He's using properly sized, and connected extrusions. Plus unlike our designs (my portable design too), he has proper bracing across the top.
...
exactly. not sure what you're referring to, here, FA-MAS. first you say there's proper bracing, which appears to contradict what i said, then you say there are plastic corner brackets which are less than ideal, which agrees with what i said.
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lkcl
if you're referring to the middle (parallel) part that goes across the top, i believe that's identified as a rail-based x-carriage support, *not* a brace. if it was a brace it would need to go diagonally... which you can't do across the top because the corexy parts are in the way.
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lkcl
metal-to-metal doesn't help if it can still rotate (about either edge, like you would move a really heavy piece of furniture by walking it on alternate corners) because you used plastic to attach the parts: plastic simply has too much elasticity. you *musn't* rely on plastic for rotation or shear strength, it's really that simple. if you use plastic you end up with a large lever effect (in this case 60 or 80mm onto 400mm, so a force multiplier effect of 5:1 or 6:1) which would *crack* the plastic if you put even the slightest bit too much force on it - and it really wouldn't take much.