Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 15, 2021 05:07PM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 17, 2021 03:43PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 18, 2021 04:47AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 18, 2021 04:55AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 2,470 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 19, 2021 03:30PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 20, 2021 11:37AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Thanks for getting back with me. About checking for retractions, it seems that an E value that is less than a previous E value will cause a retraction. This makes it tedious to check for retractions by reading gcode. On the other hand, I found that the gcode viewer on [gcode.ws] will display retractions as colored dots, making it easy to detect if there are any retractions in a particular gcode file. And I could verify that setting retraction distance to 0 in slic3r does prevent any retractions from taking place.Quote
MJLew
If there are no negative E values and no G10 commands (firmware retraction) then there should be no retractions.
I really think that lubrication is likely to be better than doing without retractions...
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 21, 2021 03:30PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 21, 2021 07:24PM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Do I understand correctly that E-step setting does not require recompilation and reflashing of the firmware, and can be done simply with an M92 command (https://marlinfw.org/docs/gcode/M092.html)? (As you might guess, I have never calibrated the E-steps yet, simply relying on the original settings in the firmware.)Quote
MJLew
Even if your E-steps are correctly set
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 23, 2021 10:42AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Quote
MJLew
Disabling retractions is a good idea for prints where they are unnecessary, but you will want to be able to retract for many prints.
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 25, 2021 08:51PM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
#2 and #3 were achieved by configuring the slicer program (slic3r) to place 4 copies of the gear at the 4 corners of the print bed.Quote
1. Print the detailed 9-tooth part at high speed, to ensure good extrusion.
2. After printing one layer of the detailed 9-tooth part, move the nozzle away from the object and allow the layer time to cool.
3. After the layer cools, move the nozzle back to the 9-tooth part, and print the next layer on top of the previous solid layer.
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 26, 2021 03:51PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 26, 2021 04:00PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 27, 2021 03:02AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Right, my mistake -- my experiments so far have been with 0.2 mm layers and 0.1 mm layers.Quote
MJLew
I assume that you are using 0.2mm layers.
That's right; the Portabee did not come with a part-cooling fan, only a barrel-cooling fan. I'm not sure if the electronics board (gen6.d) can control another fan, or not, but I'll do some research. And yes, I'm printing in PLA. For now, printing multiple objects at once (forcing the nozzle to travel between islands after each layer is printed) seems to give the previous layers enough time to cool.Quote
MJLew
I do not see a part cooling fan.
Now, the motor support itself has broken, again leaving me with no working printer.Quote
The mounting support for the extruder motor is a thin slab of plastic that has become deformed over time, likely due to proximity to the hot end. This deformity causes the motor axis not to be parallel to the axis of the extruder's bearing. I inserted a cardboard shim to force the motor to be more parallel to the axis of the extruder's bearing.
...
the extruder motor does "wobble" a bit as it rotates the drive gear, to accommodate the deformity of the driven gear.
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) February 28, 2021 06:48PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 02, 2021 04:11AM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 1,007 |
Quote
MJLew
If you are unable or unwilling to use a better extruder then perhaps you could print an improved version of the Wade extruder, there are several on Thingiverse, e.g. [www.thingiverse.com]
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 03, 2021 01:00AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 03, 2021 08:40AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Perhaps another way to avoid retraction while reducing stringing between multiple objects would be to print at a moderately lower print speed to reduce pressure in the nozzle and reduce oozing when the extruder motor stops (although the speed cannot be reduced too low, or else under-extrusion might occur).Quote
qrp-gaijin
Printing multiple objects simultaneously on the print bed requires enabling retraction. But the plastic drive gear on the extruder motor had immediately started to show signs of increased wear as soon as I enabled retraction again. And, exactly as feared -- the plastic drive gear broke, again.
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 04, 2021 04:28AM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 1,007 |
Quote
qrp-gaijin
....
Just as a matter of curiosity, what are the major disadvantages of the Wade extruder compared to more modern extruders? Long-term reliability? Weight? Extrusion consistency?
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 13, 2021 08:07AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 13, 2021 04:01PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 26 |
Re: Preventing excessive gear wear on Wade extruder? (lubrication, retraction, etc.) March 15, 2021 09:18AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 93 |
Something like this, then?Quote
MJLew
First, a small chamfer on the bottom of the gear will allow the foot to be where the gear teeth do not meet.