Parts Fan won't turn on during print
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@aidar said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
As far as i know (and how it works for me) that is normal, tool fan and part fan are same in DWC.
Normal, eh? Seems odd to have two controls for one fan ... any way to hide one?
According to settings for termostatically controlled fans, look at https://duet3d.dozuki.com/Wiki/Gcode#Section_M106_Fan_On , specially T parameter.
Yep, read that, and my hotend fan is set for it, guess I wasn't clear in what I was asking ... Does the fan ramp up and down with the HE temp or just come on at the trigger temp?
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@puterpro said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
Yep, read that, and my hotend fan is set for it, guess I wasn't clear in what I was asking ... Does the fan ramp up and down with the HE temp or just come on at the trigger temp?
Depends how you configure it. Look at examples on that link above. My understanding is, it you specify T parameter like T60:100, then fan will "wake up" at 60 and will run in full at 100. Between probably speeding up proportionally, but i am not sure about that.
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@aidar said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
.......... My understanding is, it you specify T parameter like T60:100, then fan will "wake up" at 60 and will run in full at 100. Between probably speeding up proportionally, but i am not sure about that.
Yes that's exactly right. Effectively the PWM is ramped from zero to max (255) over the temperature range in this case 60 to 100. At any temperature below 60, the fan will be off, and at any temperature above 100 it will be fully on. At mid temperature (80 in this case) the fan will be "fed" a PWM value of 128 (ish) so should run at half speed.
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Re-Re-Re-read it and found this:
"In firmware 1.19 and later, the T parameter may be of the form Taaa:bbb where aaa is the temperature at/below which the fan should be fully off and bbb is the temperature at which the fan should be fully on. The PWM will be set proportionally if the temperature is between these limits."So that's what I'm after - set it to trigger at 45 then full speed by 250.
I'll change it to this:
M106 P0 S0.3 F500 H1 T45**:250** C"Hotend Fan"Sometimes you read this stuff 10 times and it eludes you until someone smacks you with an example ... LOL! I'm a fairly bright guy but sometime feel like I've got rocks ... No idea how I missed this. Thx again.
Anyone want to take a stab at the hide the second fan control??
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@deckingman - Cross posting, LOL! Thx! Makes sense now.
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@puterpro No worries. In your example, leave out the asterixs and also the S0.3. The "S" parameter would normally fix the speed but I'm unsure how it would interact with the T parameters.
So M106 P0 F500 H1 T45:250 C"Hotend Fan"
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@deckingman - Formatting error strikes again! I had BOLDED it and forgot that it doesn't work right sometimes ... like after a colon. I wrote what you wrote. Thx!
Who knows what THAT command would do. Detach second stage or something... (Hotend flies across room ... Zing ...)
Edit: the S parameter was configured by RRF Config Tool. I agree and will remove it.
I'm marking this solved, will post separately about hiding the second fan control. Thanks to all!!
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@puterpro Ah yes. Seems these forums sometimes work like predictive text or auto correct and change something that is perfectly legitimate into something that isn't. I think it's some sort of artificial intelligence that gets bored and just tries to introduce typo's in order to pass the time. I have a theory that "smart phones" deliberately do things like that in order to make users look stupid. That's my excuse anyway......
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@deckingman said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
The "S" parameter would normally fix the speed but I'm unsure how it would interact with the T parameters.
If a temperature range is specified via
Taaa:bbb
thenSnnn
acts as the speed it starts with at temperatureis ignored.aaa
, i.e. in the above configuration that means that at 45°C the fan will start at 30% speed and ramp up to 100% on its way to 250°C. -
@wilriker said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
If a temperature range is specified via
Taaa:bbb
thenSnnn
................. is ignored.That's what I assumed and hoped would be the case.
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@deckingman I had to check in the source code after I wrote it.
But any
Lnnn
parameter (default 10%) is still honored. So if you want your fan to turn on with a specific speed at the lower end of the temperature range useLnnn
to achieve that. -
@wilriker said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
@deckingman I had to check in the source code after I wrote it.
But any
Lnnn
parameter (default 10%) is still honored. So if you want your fan to turn on with a specific speed at the lower end of the temperature range useLnnn
to achieve that.Which is in fact exactly what I do with my hot end fan.
M106 P1 S255 I0 F250 L125 H1 T60:140
It's mostly for when the hot end cools down which takes a lot longer than when it is heating. Without the "L" parameter, the fan runs slower and slower and slower as the temperature drops but the slower it runs, the longer it takes the hot end to cool. So it seems to take forever before the fan actually turns off completely and at low PWM values, it makes an annoying buzzing noise. With the "L" parameter, the fan speed drops to about 50% at around 100 deg C but maintains that speed until the hot end cools below 60, at which point it turns off completely. The net result is that the hot end cools faster and the (annoying) fan turns off sooner.
It works well for me anyway.
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@deckingman said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
The net result is that the hot end cools faster and the (annoying) fan turns off sooner.
That's the reason why I only use the most silent fans I can find. I remember the original Anet A8 hotend cooling fan. It was always on when the machine was powered with no way to turn it off - and it was ridiculously loud and noisy. Seriously it was not possible to talk with normal voice next to it. Replaced it as soon as possible with an inaudible fan and it was so... silent. Turning at 100% all the time and I was only able to hear it with my ear about 5cm away from it. Wonderful.
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@wilriker said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
That's the reason why I only use the most silent fans I can find.
Unfortunately that's not possible with a Diamond hot end because it needs seriously high air flow blowing over the 3 heat sinks. It's hard enough find a fan with sufficient air flow, let alone trying to find one that's quiet. The 5 colour is even worse.
Hence the reason that thing I'm working on (but which shall remain nameless), is water cooled.
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Phones can be EVIL! I still love my Note 8 tho' ...
M106 P1 S255 I0 F250 L125 H1 T60:140
That's an interesting approach on the hotend. I like the thought, stealing it with a little mod.
Hence the reason that thing I'm working on (but which shall remain nameless), is water cooled
Now you're talking SERIOUS mods. E3D's Aqua had me looking hard. But first I need to build an enclosure which isn't practical in my current location. Diamond HE, eh? Do you get a lot of clogs? That fan must sound like a 747!
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That's the reason why I only use the most silent fans I can find
I'm with you, I have 40mm Noctua on my hotend.
On my previous CR-10S control box I pulled all the fans (they had 3) replaced the bottom panel with a 120mm Noctua. It was virtually silent with 3x the cooling.
Still working out the mounting on my Maestro, it's currently breadboard stage ... -
@puterpro said in Parts Fan won't turn on during print:
@deckingman
Diamond HE, eh? Do you get a lot of clogs? That fan must sound like a 747!I've done an awful lot of work on "taming" the 5 colour Diamond - see my blog https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/2017/10/23/the-diamond-5-colour-part-3-finally-tamed/
No clogs now but that's after a lot of work re-designing fan ducts and increasing the fan size from 50mm to 60mm in order to get the requisite air flow. 27 cfm is sufficient and the current fan I use for that is rated at 39dBa so not too bad. During my experiments, I had one fan that was rated at 66dBa. That one sounded like Concord (much louder than 747)