Hello Mark,
Thanks for your instant reply. That was great. Just to make few things you said more clear.
You said “The default rate of 600 mm/min is 10 mm/sec. That is a LOT of filament to move through a hot-end unless you're using a very large nozzle diameter. 10mm of 1.75mm filament is about 24 cubic mm. If you have a 0.4 mm nozzle, that's enough filament to lay down a track that's 191 mm long in that 1 second period - i.e equivalent to printing at 191 mm/sec. Very few printers can print that fast.”
In Marlin, the federate for extruder is 25 mm/sec, wouldn’t that be giving much more than 10mm/sec? or the way smoothie board defines the feederate is completely different from Marlin, therefore, 10mm /sec makes sense that giving more than 25 mm/ sec? The filament Im using is 1.75, and nozzle size is 0.4. – Exactly same as your assumption. I used to use the travel speed 150, so if you said 10 mm/sec is enough for flowing the filament out with the speed 191, then in the case of 25 mm/sec, I assume that more filament can flow out and the speed can go even higher than 191?
If not, is that the case you mentioned the hardware itself limits the speed ?
“Smoothieboard doesn't make the printer go faster unless you specify faster print speeds. Smoothieboard can generate up to 100k pps to the motor, Arduino/RAMPS is limited to 40k pps. The printer speed limit is usually a function of the motor performance and the moving mass and other mechanical factors, not the motor driver or controller board. You can try to drive it faster but it may not keep up.”
So the question here is what is the highest speed and acceleration the Smoothie board can be applied and Marlin cannot, which has been tested? ( I wonder how those people who posted videos with their smoothie board testing on youtoube set their printers, those printers look moving very fast ) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_qct8ecnas is the performance of a delta printer different from prusa technically?
Also, regarding the stepper motor driver, are you saying that I will need to use a higher resolution stepper motor driver such as DQ860MA to make the machine runner faster? Or the finer step motor diver just for keeping it stable when driving faster?
However, last question I still haven’t figured out why it moves so slow when I calibrate my extruder? The speed becomes normal when I print stuffs, but while I calibrate, it took ages to complete a 100mm extrusion? I did have this problem with my ramps before, and normally it happens because of the stepper motor driver, so after changing it, it’s okay…. I wonder if this is the case?
Smoothieboard does look amazing, so I really wish that it can really make a printer performing better since the cost of this board is much more than a ramps. Please let me clarify the point mentioned above. Many thanks, Mark.
Raises a question... when you crank up the speed dial mid-print, does acceleration / junction deviation scale up as well?
Or do you keep the same accel settings and just raise the top mid-segment speed?
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Smoothieware Support" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to smoothieware-sup...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
@ Mark and Ryan,
Thanks for all your detail explanation. That was brilliant.
However, the biggest problem (slow extruder movement) I encountered which hasn’t been resolved yet. I wonder if you guys can also help me investigate what is the problem that causes this slow movement. That will be very appreciated.
These are the things that I’ve already done so far to investigate the problem :
1. 1. Swapping motors and see if it’s the problem of the motor for extruder. The motor is fine.
2.
2. Double check the extension wire I welded. This
is also fine. No loose connection or touching to another wire.
3. Changing the number for my extruder.hotend.steps_per_mm
, 689 is the number I used on another printer. I
tried both 689 and default value, which is 140. Somehow when I tried to
extruded 100mm, it always moved 20mm only. I also tried some random number, the
result is same. I assume this is where the problem is.
4. I have two smoothie boards. I moved everything
from one board to another and encountered the same problem. I tried this to
identify is it the problem of the stepper motor driver. It seems that both
board occurs the same situation. I assume unless Im very unlucky to have both
board with bad stepper motor drivers… so
this problem happens, but I guess the chance should be low.
5.. I tried to use different laptops to test if it’s the issue of prunterface since some people mentioned about it, but no, I got the same result.
I got this problem before with my old ramps board, however, I found that it’s the issue of the voltage on my A4988, so it was fixed by either tuning the voltage back to what it should be or changing a new driver. However, Im not sure if this is the same case here as I mentioned in point 4. This also happens to my second smoothie board.
Just to make it clear, I mentioned that the printer was
moving fine and I tested the printing time. That was only based on the figures
shown on prunter face while I loaded the gcode. I did try to print some stuffs
with the extruder hooked up, the motor movement seems much normal when printing
with a gcode object, but I would like to make sure that my extruder is calibrated
properly not just using a random number as more problems will come for sure
later. At the moment, I cannot even calibrate the extruder since it only moves 20mm no matter what.
I took a video to show what I mean the slow movement of my extruder in the link below, please help me have a look.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc7XKZraDVg&list=FLsKo-DOMj2RONGABZ0iXFmw&index=1
Thank you very much for all you guys' help.
I struggled with the problem of a shifting x axis for a couple weeks when I first installed my SmoothieBoard. It turned out to be a problem with the SD card. I replaced the card with one I picked up at Walmart and suddenly the problem was gone.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "Smoothieware Support" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/smoothieware-support/wKN1uPgV7S4/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to smoothieware-sup...@googlegroups.com.
I see... I will get a new one and give it a try. Did you pick up the SD card with higher class? The SD card comes with the board is class 4.
Thanks again for your great help.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "Smoothieware Support" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/smoothieware-support/wKN1uPgV7S4/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to smoothieware-sup...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.