Kossel

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Revision as of 14:00, 25 May 2013 by Johann (talk | contribs) (Bill of Materials)
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Kossel

Release status: experimental

Kossel.jpg
Description
Delta robot 3D printer with extrusion frame.
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CAD Models
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Kossel is a parametric delta robot 3D printer, built in 2012 by Johann in Seattle, USA, based on his Rostock prototype.

It is named after Albrecht Kossel, German biochemist and pioneer in the study of genetics. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1910 for his work in determining the chemical composition of nucleic acids, the genetic substance of biological cells.

Design Goals

  • Build volume: cylindrical, 170mm diameter, 250mm height.
  • Footprint: triangle, 300 mm width (240mm OpenBeam + printed corners).
  • Frame height: 600mm.
  • Print surface: round glass, doesn't move.
  • Mass of end effector with hotend: less than 50 grams.
  • Positioning speed: up to 200 mm/s in all 3 directions.
  • Positioning accuracy: at least 100 steps/mm in all 3 directions.
  • Simplicity: fewer than 200 parts.
  • Hardware cost: less than $500 USD.

Bill of Materials

Frame:

  • 3x 600mm vertical OpenBeam or Misumi HFS3-1515
  • 9x 240mm horizontal OpenBeam or Misumi HFS3-1515
  • 100x M3x8mm stainless steel screws
  • 100x M3 stainless steel nuts
  • 100x M3 nyloc nuts

Linear motion:

Bowden:

Endstops:

Electronics:

Links