Strange Ringing artifacts on coreXY
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@dc42 The pitch seems to be 2 mm (full "sine wave") which corresponds to 1 tooth (GT2-Belts).
as I am using 1.8° motors :- 80 steps per mm at 1/16 microstepping
- so 5 steps per mm at fullstep
- 2 mm banding--> 10 full steps.
I yesterday did another test:
disconnetcted the stepper motors and connected the spools with jumper wire. (to produce a good holding torque). then I carefully tried to move the x-axis back and forward only using one finger and measured the maximum distance with a gauge-> this is +/- 0,1 mm, so 0,2 mm in total. And exactly the movement shown in the videos I posted... -
Hi,
I guess you've checked it over and over again until now. but I want to ask you one more time. how are the spaces between the rod and the bearings(bushing) mechanically? and if you are using elastic coupling and the load is too much, you may have problems. -
@cgcafer don't get what you exactly mean? The rods and the linear bearings? The linear bearings (Misumi) are directly placed on the rods. The linear bearings themselves are hold with a really thick printed part. You can't measure any flex while printing.
Or do you think of the Idler? There is a screw that holds them in place. As I first changed the Idlers (after ~ 1 month of test prints) you couldn't see any damage on the screw..
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@kuhnikuehnast,
As per comments and details in the vertical banding thread, I've had this problem for a while. I found some improvement increasing the steps per mm by using smaller pulleys and 0.9 degree stepper motors, and by vibration isolating the steppers, but I would not say that I have eliminated the problem.You noted that you have changed the pulley and idler wheels, have you tried different tooth count pulley wheels?
This page under 'Stepper clipping' references this work on a similar pattern, but this is traced to different motor driver chips and stepper motors than either of us are probably using.
Mine is a DIY Prusa i3 design, some claim that these are more susceptible to motor vibration than other designs; possibly the Kossel I am building will be free of the problem?
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@kuhnikuehnast said in Strange Ringing artifacts on coreXY:
@dc42 The pitch seems to be 2 mm (full "sine wave") which corresponds to 1 tooth (GT2-Belts).
as I am using 1.8° motors :- 80 steps per mm at 1/16 microstepping
- so 5 steps per mm at fullstep
- 2 mm banding--> 10 full steps.
I yesterday did another test:
disconnetcted the stepper motors and connected the spools with jumper wire. (to produce a good holding torque). then I carefully tried to move the x-axis back and forward only using one finger and measured the maximum distance with a gauge-> this is +/- 0,1 mm, so 0,2 mm in total. And exactly the movement shown in the videos I posted...In that case I think the problem is definitely related to belt teeth and not to the motors or the firmware.
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If possible, try what I did to solve this for my DBot. Replace the rear toothed idlers with smooth ones and give the belt a flip.
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Did some further tests now:
I flipped the belts, so all Idlers are run on the smooth side of the belt (and are changed to smooth Idlers with no teeth) except the Pulleys of the Stepper motor. Therefore I had to flip the belt. This reduced the ringing a lot. It is still there but almost gone. Here a photo of the new belt-lineup (only for one motor otherwise my painting skills would be to confusing )
I also had to loose the belt tension a lot to reduce the ringing even more. So it is still visible but you can't feel it any more...
Also performed a second test:
changed to 0.9° stepper motors to increase the steps/mm. (and also tested 16 teeth Pulleys instead of 20. So I could compare the print quality from 200 steps/mm with 80 steps/mm… But there was no difference.
Next, I will try to replace the belt by a fishing line. So there won't be any toothed pulleys in the hole system any more. (the line just wrapped around the motor shaft 5 times to ensure enough friction). I know, that this isn't a solution, but it may help to find out whether the ringing is really caused by the belts...?
It is really strange!I think I just masked the problem with this conversion, but I did not fix the cause…
Almost everybody else uses the Hypercube evolution with a regular belt line-up...? -
So, next test finished:
The problem seems really to be due to the toothed belt... Using fishing line (the line wrapped around the motor shaft 5 times) the ringing was completely gone! (Despite by a damn poor accuracy )Now that the culprit has been located, the question remains: Why do I have a ringing problem while others don't? And what else can I try to solve the problem?
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It's not just you having ringing though. I'm going to be testing some supposedly genuine gates belts soon to see if that helps, but I wonder if this isn't more of a common problem than you'd think.
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Sorry, didn't get it right what you meant...? So do you think more people than me suffer from this problem or do you think it is a specific common problem on my printer?
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for example: a friend of mine also owns a Hypercube evolution- and he can't reproduce the problem at all???
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I meant that I wonder how many other people have the problem but just don't notice it or ignore it or get frustrated and give up trying to fix it.
I'm also trying to chase down the exact cause of it. Is it the belt? Is it the tooth profile? Is it an eccentric pulley?
What is different between the people who have the problem and the people who don't?
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@phaedrux
I suspect most 3d printers have the problem, the users just don't notice it or consider it normal. When I started recognising it, I realised I had it on some of my oldest prints, with completely different frame, extruder, hotend, motors. I see the problem in most images of printed parts online now.Probably more massive printers like Deckingman's avoid it.
Mine seems to be stepper motor vibration, Here's some things I have found can affect it:
- PETG vs ABS : I think PETG solidifies faster and locks in the waves, while ABS stays soft and they even out. Also PETG tends to be more shiny so the pattern is more noticeable. I don't use PLA (don't have a fan), but my previous experience was it is very soft and slow to harden so should not show the problem.
- lower belt tension - causes other problems of course, but my theory is that the vibrations are not transferred as well with lower tension. Created this tensioner so I could vary the belt tension in a controlled fashion to test this. @kuhnikuehnast interesting idea to replace with fishing line, but again this might be just reducing the tension and hence the linkage between the vibration and the extruding filament at the nozzle.
- more steps per mm as noted elsewhere (so 16t pulleys, created this GT2 belt clip to help with that, and 0.9 degree stepper motors).
- in my case it seems to be a constant frequency around 25 Hz (with 1.8 degree steppers), so the pattern is most pronounced printing at 30mm/sec. Slower speeds run the peaks together so the surface is rougher but without the pattern, higher speeds spread the peaks out so they are less noticeable. If yours is belt teeth or a wheel issue I would expect the pattern to be consistent regardless of print speed.
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@robm said in Strange Ringing artifacts on coreXY:
@phaedrux
I suspect most 3d printers have the problem, the users just don't notice it or consider it normal. When I started recognising it, I realised I had it on some of my oldest prints, with completely different frame, extruder, hotend, motors. I see the problem in most images of printed parts online now.Probably more massive printers like Deckingman's avoid it.
Mine seems to be stepper motor vibration, Here's some things I have found can affect it:
- PETG vs ABS : I think PETG solidifies faster and locks in the waves, while ABS stays soft and they even out. Also PETG tends to be more shiny so the pattern is more noticeable. I don't use PLA (don't have a fan), but my previous experience was it is very soft and slow to harden so should not show the problem.
- lower belt tension - causes other problems of course, but my theory is that the vibrations are not transferred as well with lower tension. Created this tensioner so I could vary the belt tension in a controlled fashion to test this. @kuhnikuehnast interesting idea to replace with fishing line, but again this might be just reducing the tension and hence the linkage between the vibration and the extruding filament at the nozzle.
Interesting thing is, with the "normal" setup I used before (toothed Idler): As I reduced the belt tension, the ringing increased. Only as I used the flipped belt, I could improve the quality by a reduction of tension.
- more steps per mm as noted elsewhere (so 16t pulleys, created this GT2 belt clip to help with that, and 0.9 degree stepper motors).
The more steps/mm idea didn't help as written above (200/mm vs. 80/mm)
- in my case it seems to be a constant frequency around 25 Hz (with 1.8 degree steppers), so the pattern is most pronounced printing at 30mm/sec. Slower speeds run the peaks together so the surface is rougher but without the pattern, higher speeds spread the peaks out so they are less noticeable. If yours is belt teeth or a wheel issue I would expect the pattern to be consistent regardless of print speed.
here you are right... It is independent of print speed. (although I could notice a small reduction while printing at horrible fast speed. (but this also reduced the overall print quality).
For me it is just really really strange! I print the same filament (PETG) as with my Anet A8 (converted to an Am8). And this damn printer (A8) worth with all the updates ~200€ prints so damn perfect compared to this 3k-machine... I can't print almost nothing that has to fit together because of this damn ringing! argh!
May I just ended up with bad luck as I bought the Idlers and have to give another try? Any source of good quality Idlers around in europe?
and @the problem of vibration: Already thought about "undock" the motor from the normal belt? (e.g. using a double Pulley with an endless belt?)
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Morning. I've a thingverse d-bot core xy at work and an ormerod 2 at home. The Dbot is running a duet ethernet (recently upgraded from duet 0.6) and 0.9 degree high torque steppers on the xy plane. The Ormerod has the metal x arm and bed support, and an adjustable foot but is otherwise standard with the Duet 0.6 and 1.8 degree steppers.
I see the problem in my machine too, and you can see it on a photo where I was asking for help with another issue. I'll add the link when I find it. Changing the duet card, and from 1.8 to 0.9 steppers had no effect on the pattern.
I've only recently started to work om the ormerod but don't see the pattern on there.
The belts on the Ormerod are twisted to run smooth side on the idlers. They are also much shorter, so assuming all else equal (think ormerod has gxl belts and dbot is whatever ooznest put in the dbot kit) will be much stiffer - stretching far less for the same load.
The dbot was built as per the build manual amd the belts run toothed side over the rear idlers at least. I had thought about running toothed idlers but that isn't a small mod. I will try twisting the belts to get smooth side on the idlers though!
Edit: Here's the link to my post about a seperate issue but showing the wobble.
https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/5052/extrusion-not-always-starting-correctly/2
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make sure the pulleys on the motors are centered. If Y jitters with x-movement, some pulley/idler is out of center. This can happen when you have tightened you grub screw a bit uneven. Calculate whether 1 revolution of motor equals the the distance between the peaks in the pattern
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@robm said in Strange Ringing artifacts on coreXY:
A few more thoughts:
- even with the metal frame your Anet probably flexes more than the corexy and thus dampens vibration?
- In your image I count more bands in the bottom strip compared to the top.
I think that's just because of the photo... As the part is printed just 1 layer in vase mode it tends to bend and you can't take a photo exactly...
- I found this app useful in characterizing the problem
Tried a similar thing yesterday for android... The frame isn't vibrating at all.... It is just the Carriage "vibrating" back and forward on the y- respectively x-axis.
@alexlin said in Strange Ringing artifacts on coreXY:
make sure the pulleys on the motors are centered. If Y jitters with x-movement, some pulley/idler is out of center. This can happen when you have tightened you grub screw a bit uneven. Calculate whether 1 revolution of motor equals the the distance between the peaks in the pattern
This was also a thought I had... But as I also tried 0.9 stepper motors, they have round shafts. So The Pulleys are almost perfectly centered as they are installed...
This problem really ride me nuts! What would you think is the best idea to test next:
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re-design all printed parts to run with a 9 mm belt? (maybe the thickness of the belt is just to small? (but couldn't recognize a difference as changed from 6 mm to 5 mm belts)
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Switch the whole system to "fishing-line-driven" (using v-slot bearings and this "motor-line-mount" http://forums.reprap.org/read.php?246,818734 )
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Trying to use a 2-sides-fixed Pulley instead of the motor shaft at the ends? (could build a double-sided Pulley-Mount and run the motors "uncoupled" with an endless belt)
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This is a photo of the results as I used the fishing line...
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Could it be that the pulley teeth don't have the right profile for a GT2 belt, so the belt doesn't fit snugly on them? Or that the belt teeth do not have the correct profile?
I had a similar problem with Chinese-made MXL pulleys a while ago. The tooth profile of the pulleys didn't match the belts at all. I eventually solved the problem by switching to UK-made belts and pulleys.