Best Z Probe for Duet 3 Mini 5+
-
@zapta the 0.1 comes from the probe location, I assume your homez is at a different location. So z=0 at your homing location results in an offset at this x/y
In terms of repeatability, it's pretty good. Bltouch advertises 0.005mm stdev. I got 0.002 on my ir sensor. without unlocking, I got 0.002 on the microswitch. Probing speed can also affect consistency, I normally probe with F100.
All things considered being under 0.01mm is good enough, unless you're pushing like 0.04mm first layer heights... babystep resolution is like 0.01mm at most (and more often 0.04 or 0.02mm)
-
Thanks @pfn, I will keep it then. I find this Clicky probe simpler than the Voron V2.4 stock end switch + inductive probe and so far it seems to be reliable, never missed a drop or pickup and the probe stayed in place when I turned the machine over to access the electronics.
BTW, since you mention speed 100, I reduced the M558 speed to F500:100 (was F120) and got slightly lower deviation from mean but I don't know if it's statistically significant.
G32 bed probe heights: -0.140 -0.141 -0.141 -0.151 -0.149 -0.140 -0.146 -0.136 -0.146 -0.143 -0.150, mean -0.144, deviation from mean 0.005
To answer the original question here, Duet Mini5+ and a Clicky probe work well for me.
-
@zapta lol, whoops, that was a typo, I meant I normally probe at F300.
Yeah, I'm not sure it's very different to warrant going slower. Don't get rid of the original voron endstop switch tho! Do this!
-
@pfn, I am using dual speed F500:100, I don't waste much time lowering the Z.
As for the video, that's a nice trick, having a fixed reference point that can home both the nozzle and the Clickey switch. Personally like minimalist systems so throw away whatever I can. I calibrate the Z probe offset with babysteps, setting initial value, than finding a good babystep distance and substracting it from the initial z offset. Once this is set, I do final adjustments, as needed, with the slicer's z offset which is easy to adjust.
As for the trick above, I think it's accurate only if the clickey and static switches trigger at exactly the same time. Otherwise you incur error base on the current travel locations of each of the two switches.
Anyway, I love my Clickey probe and thanks to the test you suggested I also know it's reasonably good.
-
@paulhew Thanks for your support!
There are many in the Railcore community that are VERY happy with it. From the mounts that we have designed and dock options. We have one that attaches to the corner of the extrusion if you don't have extra nuts in the extrusion channels.
Scan the QR code and enjoy! We are always available on the Discord channel too. -
@zapta thanks for the answers bro Ill be looking into making my own clicky probe as Ive got so many endstop switches laying around!!! I just ordered a six dollar filament runout sensor and I just thought about it and I opned that filament runout sensor and sure enough all it was internally was a mechanical endstop switch with a roller wheel on the tip of the metal contact bar!
-
That is how we do our switch proving in our heated and non-heated chamber. We are over 250,000 deploy-probe-stow cycles on the test printer: batches of (X,Y) fixed coordinates, at random Z dive heights, and various speeds. After a bunch of cycles, we maually check the switch, magnets dock, etc...
-
@sinned6915 said in Best Z Probe for Duet 3 Mini 5+:
We are over 250,000 deploy-probe-stow cycles on the test printer
Does it matter what micro switch we use? Are the all about the same or do some models result in tighter accuracy?
-
As for the trick above, I think it's accurate only if the clickey and static switches trigger at exactly the same time. Otherwise you incur error base on the current travel locations of each of the two switches.
This isn't actually a problem, only one of the 2 switches is aligned to activate. There is a static offset of the mechanism, but it's constant.
-
@pfn said in Best Z Probe for Duet 3 Mini 5+:
This isn't actually a problem, only one of the 2 switches is aligned to activate.
I think this is exactly the problem, At the time that the main switch activates, the other switch is not necessary at its activation point (e.g. fully pressed or fully released) which introduces a an error. But anyway, you can always fix it latter with babysteps.
BTW, it just occurred to me that now that the inductive probe is gone, I can mount on that small clickey bracket an accelerometer. It's a good position, close to the nozzle, and with convenient route for the wires.