wow.. checked and double checked config yesterday without testing … fired up this morning to test and everything is now working like a charm... Home Y button turns blue, and when I move the Head Position indicates the correct values.
Posts made by djnoyz
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RE: First axis homing test
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RE: First axis homing test
Thanks for replying. I must admit, at first, I did have the forward and backward thing wrong. I was so focused on they-axis carriage going left and right, assuming that utmost left was 0, and utmost right was 642 + headroom. ( the bed area would be x200 y642) that I was constantly thinking left = 0, right is 642.. I know, it should be different if you look at how the bed is situated with respect to the nozzle. I want to use 5mm headroom left and right.
so for now, what I have in config.g which is relevant for y-axis is :
M569 P1 S0 ; Drive 1 goes backwards
– because going left means adding mm
M574 X0 Y2 Z0 S1 ; set homing switch configuration
-- the end stop is located left, but the bed moves to a fixed x-z gantry like the ormerod printer, so I assume the Y axis endstop switch is at the high end ( Y2 ) and it is normally closed.
M208 X200 Y642 Z200 ; set y-axis maxima to 642 mm
M208 X-8 Y-5 Z-0.5 S1 ; set y-axis minima to -5 mmif I use the M119 code , I get the correct reading for endstop 'at max stop' or 'not stopped' when the switch is activated or not.
The machine properties page of dwc nicely shows this as well 'endstop hit yes' or no, which is accurateIn the config file, I have set the min and max for travel along the y-axis
My plan is to home towards the y-axis endstop, which would put the nozzle at 647 mm. moving 5mm to the right is 642 mm, which is the far end of the bed as far as the nozzle would see it...The homey.g file does exactly what it should do... so I'm very happy... it moves to the left, hitting the endstop, going 4 mm back to the right, disengaging the endstop, and then going back to the left very slowly to hit the endstop again. I thought that sending the G92 Y647 command in the homey.g file would let the firmware know it's location ( max bed distance + 5mm headroom ) After that, it moves to the right so that the nozzle ( which is not yet present ) would point at 0 on the bed.
If I give instructions to move, it works, it also obeys the minimal and maximal value for the axis so I believe everything worked. It's just that the web interface doesn't show that homing worked by changing the color of the button, and it also does not report the position of the y axis back to me... this is always 0.
I just thought there might be a command to tell the web interface that homing succeeded...
This is the general url of where I post my adventure.. I'm under the impression this is posted public, so maybe this url will work beter. I currently don't have an idea on how to post links to pictures that would stay there for a long time...
https://djnoyz.wordpress.com/ -
First axis homing test
Hi,
I'm building a Cartesian printer 'from scratch' by copying a lot from an ormerod setup. I've only hooked up the Y-axis with endstop and I've tried the homing sequence.
When I home the Y-axis, it executes all steps from the homey.g file correctly but in the web-interface, the Home Y button stays yellow. If I move the y-axis, the Machine Status on the top right also keeps saying 0 for Y-axis. It does however know my axis max and min value with respect to the homed 0 position, and it does not exceed them… so I guess the homing result is OK, but it's just not shown in the web-interface. Is this because I only have one axis connected and nothing else yet ? Or do I need to tell the firmware that Y-axis homing is finished ?You can see my setup here : https://wordpress.com/read/feeds/51775069/posts/1238478437
[[language]] G91 ; relative mode ; G1 Z4 F200 ; raise head to avoid dragging nozzle over the bed G1 Y680 F4500 S1 ; move up to 680mm in the +X direction, stopping if the homing switch is triggered G1 Y-4 F1000 ; move slowly 4mm in the -X direction G1 Y10 F100 S1 ; move slowly 10mm in the +X direction, stopping at the homing switch G90 ; back to absolute mode G92 Y647 ; this is 642 + 5mm G1 Y0 F45000 ; now go to 0 G91 ; relative mode ;G1 Z-4 F200 ; lower the head again G90 ; back to absolute mode
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RE: Building a custom 3D printer step by step
Thanks dc42,
Really looking forward to getting started.
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Building a custom 3D printer step by step
Hi everbody,
I'm very happy to have found the duet wifi project page and this forum. A simple introduction : I got started with 3D printing a couple of months ago when my nephew dumped his Ormerod 1 printer on my desk because he couldn't find the time to properly calibrate it. So I invested some time and I'm very happy to be able to print my own creations.
At one time I'll have to give him his printer back so I really want to create a custom 3D printer for my own. I have a degree in electro-mechanics but it's been over a decade that I had to use it to a certain degree… hope it will all come back to me as I go.
I've been reading up on building your own 3D printer for some time now, and was very pleased to find this Duet Wifi board so I pre-ordered it immediately.
As I want to take my time to learn, design, test, ... every aspect of my upcoming project, my first question would be : would it be possible to approach this as a step by step project with the Duet board, .. so meaning : attaching a power supply and for instance only the Y-axis stepper, endstop and 'play around' with just the Y-axis ?
Then moving on with the Z-axis ... then next next next. Or will the firmware require some values from temperature sensors or stuff like that ?My goal is in the first place to learn... to freshen up what I used to know about electronics, and in the process try to end up with a reasonable quality 3D printer that I can keep on tweaking / tuning / ...
Any suggestions are certainly welcome. In the meantime I'll hurt my brain some more on these complex 'which stepper to choose' equations and variables