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Hi Blowtorch
this is in deed an ongoing problem. The 3D printing extras costs
money, makes boards heavy and large, uses up IO pins for nothing.
They're spec'd for slow motion, or high torque, large motor and
FET currents. On the other hand, features needed for PnP are
missing, like high motor voltage (for speed), vacuum sensing,
current regulated (breakout) LED rings, USB hub and USB isolator.
An optimal PnP controller would IMHO reside on the head, so it
must be small and light.
There have been many announcements for PnP specific boards, some
by users of this group, but so far I have yet to see a board that
is available to buy, and has good support for OpenPnP
features.
In the end I guess it is a "size of market" problem.
_Mark
Hi Shai,
Cool!
I didn't know it is available to ship. Is this new?
Feed-back:
I tried to add it to the cart to see price and stock
availability, but this doesn't work (Firefox):

_Mark
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A ton of the signals are needed on the head. You need USB anyway (Top Camera) and all the cables that you can save by moving the controller to the head are much thicker in sum, especially if you use shielded and drag chain grade cables per motor, and per signal destination.
The PSU cable is not that bad, and given good bypassing
(caps) on the controller, you can probably add them with no
shielding.
One option is to use dedicated drivers on the Y, or the Y and X
motors and drive those with STEP/DIR signals coming back from the
head (very thin). These drivers can take PSU voltage bus style.
The Rapid Star board seems to support all that, does really look
good!
Note that some Duet 3 boards can drive sub-controllers over CAN
in a coordinated manner. So this would give you another option.
Note, I'm excluding electronic feeders here. Having a separate central
feeder controller (or multiple) is certainly valid, and there is
no down-side (these do not need to be hard real-time coordinated).
_Mark
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Works.
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.Just as a side note: large current (pulsed) power taken separately can shift and bounce the ground. You should aim for external drivers with opto-couplers (or similar) for the DIR/STEP/EN.
In PnP you cannot usually consume that much current,
because at high speeds the back-EMF is too high. You'd need
low-inductance steppers or higher voltages. Be sure to use the
full 36V!
See the "Higher Voltage, please!" section here:
https://makr.zone/choosing-a-motion-controller-the-panucatt-azteeg-x5-gt-32bit/455/
_Mark
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Hi David,
> Does PnP really require higher speeds than fast 3D
printers?
Yes. Much longer travel on average, more time to get really fast
(I'm comparing to consumer size 3D printers, and correspondingly
sized printing models here).
> What X and Y speeds and accelerations are desirable for typical machines running OpenPnP?
There's no limit 😎
> I would expect ringing to be a potential issue for PnP
machines too
Yes it is. Input shaping would be nice, and our discussion
somehow stalled, I'll continue in the other thread:
https://groups.google.com/g/openpnp/c/5SJMYX110p0/m/9vUKh9ZcAgAJ
_Mark
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