Hi everyone!
I built two FEDs by following the instructions on
hackday.io, but testing them in the mouse home cages yielded unsatisfying results, compared to the FEDs that I assembled from 3D parts printed from Shapeways and electronic kits from Open Ephys. The FEDs that I built from scratch easily get pellets jammed and ends up with mouse being starved (I only used free feeding mode). After testing it manually without mouse, I suspect the problem is caused by the not optimal positioning of the nosepiece. There is a gap (although small) between the steel nosepiece and the photo-interrupter (see the first picture attached). This probably leads to either the pellets being not detected in the port and then more pellets get delivered (then cause the jam), or the pellets drop (and a small jump in the port) leads to a pellet retrieval count.
Unfortunately I cannot push the PCB board more forward (so that the photo-interrupter is in line with the nosepiece, just like the second picture attached) because of the height of the Neopixel. The PCB board soldered by Open EPhys doesn’t have the problem because the Neopixel is kind of integrated into the PCB so the height is reduced.
Could someone help to verify if it’s really the nosepiece positioning caused the problem? If so, could we have a more user-friendly and updated housing .stl 3D printing file for the users who build from scratch?
The parts I used: