EXTRUSION PROBLEM WITH 1LC TOOLBOARD
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@Gianluca You said earlier that if you ran the toolboard with it printing in air there was no problem? Now I'm as confused as Deckingman.
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@gloomyandy
I try to explain myself better.
Yes, when the printer is cold and I test it in the air, it extrudes normally, when I start a real print, it stops extruding after a few minutes/seconds. It looks like a loss of power due to heat, but the engine is not.
As soon as the print is done, I immediately redo the extrusion tests in the air, it does not extrude... -
@Gianluca I'd suggest that you run two tests....
- Babystep up 5mm or so upwards, then run the test print so that the extrusion is into air. If it is still extruding at then end of the print then I would say that you do not have a driver/heating problem.
- Babystep back down until you are 0.2 or 0.3mm above zero (as suggested above) and try the print again.
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@gloomyandy said in EXTRUSION PROBLEM WITH 1LC TOOLBOARD:
@Gianluca I'd suggest that you run two tests....
- Babystep up 5mm or so upwards, then run the test print so that the extrusion is into air. If it is still extruding at then end of the print then I would say that you do not have a driver/heating problem.
- Babystep back down until you are 0.2 or 0.3mm above zero (as suggested above) and try the print again.
Yes, I like point 1, I try it right away, then I move on to the second test...
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@Gianluca This sounds very similar to the issue I am having. At times, at the beginning of the print, it acts as if the extruder motor is being under driven by the 1LC. If I turn off the printer, and restart, it extrudes normally again. I've had no luck troubleshooting it. It only occurs about 5-10% of the times I start a print.
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While this is probably not relevant in this case, I recently ran into a situation where I had an extruder with low power in one direction and normal power in the reverse direction. It took me way too long (and a replacement 1LC board) to figure out that, while executing a particular macro, I set the speed way too high in one direction which caused all kinds of mayhem.
Just thought I would mention it since it took forever to find the extra '0' in the macro file <sigh>
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@jens55 said in EXTRUSION PROBLEM WITH 1LC TOOLBOARD:
While this is probably not relevant in this case, I recently ran into a situation where I had an extruder with low power in one direction and normal power in the reverse direction. It took me way too long (and a replacement 1LC board) to figure out that, while executing a particular macro, I set the speed way too high in one direction which caused all kinds of mayhem.
Just thought I would mention it since it took forever to find the extra '0' in the macro file <sigh>
Yes, thank you, I had read your post and in fact it allowed me to correct some too high step/mm errors (not macro errors) which distorted the extrusion tests.
Even with the correct parameters the problem remained. -
@Gianluca said in EXTRUSION PROBLEM WITH 1LC TOOLBOARD:
@gloomyandy said in EXTRUSION PROBLEM WITH 1LC TOOLBOARD:
@Gianluca I'd suggest that you run two tests....
- Babystep up 5mm or so upwards, then run the test print so that the extrusion is into air. If it is still extruding at then end of the print then I would say that you do not have a driver/heating problem.
- Babystep back down until you are 0.2 or 0.3mm above zero (as suggested above) and try the print again.
Yes, I like point 1, I try it right away, then I move on to the second test...
I did some tests and it seems to be better.
- the first photo shows the aborted print due to filament flow interruption. After a restart of the printer, an extrusion test in air was still performed without problems...
- the second and third photo shows the next print where I reduced the power of the extruder cooling fan from 100% to 70% and I put two heatsinks on the MCU and on the driver.
- the Z offset was already perfect. It can be seen that the first layer is extruded correctly without smudges and the engine now heats up well (about 65-70°C) before putting the heatsink on, the engine didn't heat up!
I've done other small prints as well and everything seems to be going much better.
Note: the stepper is a nema 14 it is a 1.0A Fysetc and I make it work at 1.0A because if I bring it (as it would be correct) to about 80% of the rated current, the problem reappears...
I remain of the idea that there is a heating problem of the 1LC, and I will also put a small 30mm cooling fan on the toolboard...
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In pinting now... definitely much better...
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I believe and hope I have solved the problem.
It was a set of factors that led to a progressive underextrusion caused by wrong parameters in the slicer.
However, I put heatsinks on the MCU and Driver, with the addition of a 30x30mm fan.
It was also crucial to have made the PEI surface rough, this allowed the material to stick perfectly to the surface and allow excellent prints.
Now everything seems to work...
You can mark it as solved, thanks.! -
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