Thanks for your updated comments. Here's the text of my last email to you for others to look at if they wish:
I'm afraid I have no knowledge of spectra and I plan to use much lower temperatures than that. I would want to check that the motors and electronics (including insulation) are either shielded from the heat or won't get damaged if they are trying to transfer their own heat of operation into an unforgiving 80*C.
Today I stumbled upon v-slot, which you can get metal wheels for, so that could be an option for your frame material. I certainly am considering using a single 2020 section of it for my X gantry and two sections of it for my Y rails (but with delrin/plastic wheels to keep the wear on the wheels, which are replaceable, and not on the rails). Having looked at the challenges of scaling 3D printer axes up, two significant issues appear to be the mass of the moving parts and the sag in the rods/rails. The 2020 v-slot appears to be better than 16mm dia steel rod from some uniform distributed and point load deflection calcs I have done, for a 600mm span. This is especially valuable as you can use only one of the sections to achieve what you'd need two 16mm steel rods for in the X gantry. This then drops the mass of the gantry rail from over 1kg to about 300g. I'm not saying that the wheels/mounting plate won't eat up some of that saving, compared to a 3D printed gantry end housing a LM16LUU bearing but I think it's definitely worth a shot and initial costs don't look significantly larger (quick survey of Aliexpress). Does anyone know a good supplier of V slot to UK? The vslot-europe website says all parts are only available for preorder.
Moving on to the mass of the moving parts a bit more, this seems important to me because we are probably going to rely on a system which appears more prone to the potential for slipping against the wire, compared to timing belts. If accelerations are too great we might lose accuracy in such a drastic way that the print becomes untenable. Another consideration for my planned large Y travel is that the wire is not infinitely thin and so it spirals up and down the spool/bobbin/pulley on the stepper motor. I'd have to do some calcs to check that my envisaged range of movement wasn't going to demand a stupidly tall pulley to deal with all those coils winding their way up it as it takes in and pays out wire. My backup mechanism is to use a HTD 3 belt in a U shape, similar to the DW-G Y layout. If I get to this point, I might get a larger (NEMA 23) stepper to try and accelerate the larger mass in line with the X axis ability. Of course I'm just pondering out loud here - I haven't even checked my Printrboard can serve a NEMA 23!
Finally, on Z-axis, my thoughts are to go with a 3 No. 8mm dia trapezoidal lead screw with brass nuts. You can get a set on Aliexpress for about $27. I plan to mount these vertically in 608zz bearings at both ends and either the top or bottom of one of them will have the Z stepper coupled to it. I will try and print a combined HTD pulley, stepper shaft AND 8mm lead screw coupler to connect them. The remaining two screws will be attached (in the same plane as the Z stepper) to their bearings with a combined HTD pulley, 8mm lead screw AND 608 bearing coupler. I have found a great pulley design software on
Thingiverse which I will explain to you if you want a head start on how to work it out (it took me a while but I'm not going to tar you with the same brush!). I will use a tensioner bearing too and this whole setup will hopefully allow me to do a Z axis with only one stepper. I saw one post where a novice (as I am) asked for help to scale up a printer (he didn't own one yet) and he was told he was ridiculous for not considering the weight of his massive parts and how he would spec a stepper powerful enough to lift them. The poor bloke was so new he didn't realise that the Z axis never needs to lift the part, only the Xand/orY axes OR LOWER the bed. So I'm hopeful that even if the bed gets heavy (about 2kg for a 500x500x3mm sheet of mirror glass) we won't have too much work for the NEMA 17 Z stepper to do, as the print will be "falling with style" as Buzz Lightyear might say.