Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? July 19, 2015 04:20AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 606 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? July 19, 2015 05:23AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? July 23, 2015 09:53AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 22 |
![]() July 23, 2015 10:57AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 34 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? July 25, 2015 03:58AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 169 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? August 15, 2015 10:54AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 100 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 05:06AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
Review: The Bondtech Extruder!Quote
simspeed
I decided to give this one a try. Will need two but only ordered one to test. I broke it down when it arrived and the opposing gear filament drive looks solid and well made. The housing is well made too. Runs off a geared Nema 17.
[attachment 58774 Extruder-1.png]
BondTech
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 05:36AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 12:54PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
I have always used microstepping for all motors but if I go to a direct drive would it be best to go to full steps? I have been told full steps is loud and not worth it but I have no idea for the extruder.Quote
dc42
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
No, reducing microstepping only reduces the torque per microstep. The torque per unit angle error remains the same. The only situation I can think of in which reducing microstepping is a good idea is if your electronics can't generate the step pulses fast enough.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 01:22PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Quote
Dark Alchemist
I have always used microstepping for all motors but if I go to a direct drive would it be best to go to full steps? I have been told full steps is loud and not worth it but I have no idea for the extruder.Quote
dc42
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
No, reducing microstepping only reduces the torque per microstep. The torque per unit angle error remains the same. The only situation I can think of in which reducing microstepping is a good idea is if your electronics can't generate the step pulses fast enough.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 01:39PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
You said reducing microstepping I am asking how low to go? I see a lot of advocates for full stepping or half stepping or even quarter stepping for these things. I was going to do full or half stepping on Z and when I looked around it seemed to be a can of worms on that subject.Quote
dc42
Quote
Dark Alchemist
I have always used microstepping for all motors but if I go to a direct drive would it be best to go to full steps? I have been told full steps is loud and not worth it but I have no idea for the extruder.Quote
dc42
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
No, reducing microstepping only reduces the torque per microstep. The torque per unit angle error remains the same. The only situation I can think of in which reducing microstepping is a good idea is if your electronics can't generate the step pulses fast enough.
I already answered that question in the response you quoted.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 01:52PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Quote
Dark Alchemist
You said reducing microstepping I am asking how low to go? I see a lot of advocates for full stepping or half stepping or even quarter stepping for these things. I was going to do full or half stepping on Z and when I looked around it seemed to be a can of worms on that subject.Quote
dc42
Quote
Dark Alchemist
I have always used microstepping for all motors but if I go to a direct drive would it be best to go to full steps? I have been told full steps is loud and not worth it but I have no idea for the extruder.Quote
dc42
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
No, reducing microstepping only reduces the torque per microstep. The torque per unit angle error remains the same. The only situation I can think of in which reducing microstepping is a good idea is if your electronics can't generate the step pulses fast enough.
I already answered that question in the response you quoted.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 02:04PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
Very good to know and that increases the torque too, or so I read. Now with a geared extruder things change so I guess keep the microstepping on? I use the Wades made for the i3 rework (43:10 so a 4.3:1 ratio) and I never knew what microstepping to use so I just left it at 1/16 (the lowest setting).Quote
dc42
Quote
Dark Alchemist
You said reducing microstepping I am asking how low to go? I see a lot of advocates for full stepping or half stepping or even quarter stepping for these things. I was going to do full or half stepping on Z and when I looked around it seemed to be a can of worms on that subject.Quote
dc42
Quote
Dark Alchemist
I have always used microstepping for all motors but if I go to a direct drive would it be best to go to full steps? I have been told full steps is loud and not worth it but I have no idea for the extruder.Quote
dc42
Quote
plankton
@DC42 - I notice your formulae assumes 1/16 microstepping, if you lower the number of microsteps/step from 16 to 8 you double the holding torque (at the expense of some resolution), so in theory that allows a smaller (lighter) motor on your direct drive extruder. For a typical direct drive you might be looking at 75 steps/mm, instead of 150 steps/mm for 1/16 microstepping.
Has anyone tried this, is it practical?
No, reducing microstepping only reduces the torque per microstep. The torque per unit angle error remains the same. The only situation I can think of in which reducing microstepping is a good idea is if your electronics can't generate the step pulses fast enough.
I already answered that question in the response you quoted.
OK, I said it only makes sense to reduce microstepping if the electronics cannot keep up. The same goes for turning off microstepping altogether. With a direct drive extruder, the electronics will always be able to keep up because the steps/mm is lower than for a geared extruder.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 05:13PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 06:48PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
Thank you as I plan to go to a direct drive mechanism and I now know to make it 1:1. Will the motor get hot? I have read it will and to use a fan or better yet a heatsink on the motor but the only one I saw was in GB with shipping being hellishly expensive so around 18 dollars for each heatsink.Quote
dc42
With a geared extruder, the step rate is higher, but the electronics can normally still keep up with the step rate even when doing high speed retraction or filament loading. So it is usual to use the highest available microstepping still. I guess there are some combinations for which that might not be true, such as a DRV8825 driver (which can do 1/32 microstepping) used with a 0.9deg/step motor (which needs twice as many step pulses as a normal 1.8deg/step motor), a highly-geared extruder, and 8-bit electronics.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 06:57PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 20, 2015 08:17PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,277 |
Ahhhh, most excellent as I try to run all of my motors at 1.35A for a 1.5A motor so that works then. I am just dieing to try direct drive AND I just wish they could come up with the flexishaft drive that is reasonable in price but luckily people are trying so we will, hopefully, get there so the motor is stationary and off loaded.Quote
dc42
If you run the motor at 85% of its rated current then you will lose only 15% of its potential torque, but it will dissipate 28% less power and run warm but not too hot.
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? November 26, 2015 06:51AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 4 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? March 12, 2016 03:14PM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 72 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? March 12, 2016 03:23PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 5,746 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? March 12, 2016 03:38PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? October 17, 2016 04:28AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 364 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? October 17, 2016 08:51AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Quote
ekaggrat
pull up a old thread.
is the units actually Nm .. that would make a 4.4Kg.cm motor useless but it actully is okay? 4.4 kg.c m is .4Nm so in the formula the value would be
.8/1.75 * 0.4 * 500 = 213 ???
am i making a mistake somewhere? I am actually designing a light weight extruder using a 42mm tin can stepper motor and i was trying to work out the optimum torgue when i came accross this post
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? October 17, 2016 09:31AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 364 |
Re: Are direct drive extruders any good? October 17, 2016 01:17PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 14,646 |
Quote
ekaggrat
okay then by that means a 33 mm long stepper should be enough for a direct drive. but you mentioned that the bare minimum for a direct drive is 48mm.. a 48 mm motor on a average has 4.4kgcm holding torque so even at half its rating will give
.8/1.75 * 44 * 500 = 10057 .. so it is a overkill
a 33mm long motor with average 3.1 kg.cm and 1.4 amps would give
.8/1.4 * 31 * 500 = 8857 ... still on the higher side
and a cheap 33 mm long motor with 1.3 kgcm and .8 amp would give
.5/.8 * 13 *500 = 4062 .. that would be on the lower side
i am contemplating using a mitsumi 42mm tin can motor with a holding torque of 420 g.cm with a gear ratio of 1:5 so that should give me
.5/.8 * 21 ( 420*5 ) *500 = 6560 .. so in theory it should work.. the main advantage with this would be a 150 gm motor resulting in a light weight extruder ..