Topic: Too much troubleshooting
This is mostly to vent, and entirely my fault-
I was trying to do the Y axis alignment from the Solidoodle video, but couldn't because one of the pulleys was stuck due to a stripped set screw. I figured I would go ahead and drill the screw and replace it with a screw from one of the front pulleys which doesn't need it. Turned out that the pulleys that don't need set screws don't have them. So I am down a pulley and the printer is sidelined until Solidoodle can get me a new one, which they did pretty quick.
I got the pulley put in, and everything aligned as well as I think I can get it. I'm was excited that I can finally start printing parts to make the spool winder to go with the Filastruder. While I was waiting for the bed to heat up, I smelled something burning. Apparently something shorted on the Azteeg controller because it wouldn't appear as anything other than Unknown Device on any computer, even after wiping the PC to factory default and reloading the drivers.
I still have my old Sanguinololu. I upgraded to the Azteeg because the Sanguino melted its power terminal and I couldn't get it off. I have a better solder station now, and I was able to remove the melted terminal block and replace it with a new one from Frys. I wired everything up to the Sanguinololu, but the endstops were reversed, being active when the switch wasn't pressed. I tried reversing them in firmware, but it never seemd to make a difference, and finally I had to rewire all three of them to make them behave right.
I was finally ready to make a print, but it wasn't extruding right, there were a lot of gaps, but no skipped steps from the extruder. I saw that the bearing would stop turning even though the gear was still pushing some filament through. Turned out the bearing was rubbing against the Jigsaw Replacement mount in a couple of spots when the tension was put on. I used a dremel to ground down a couple of areas that were interfering with the bearing and it tracked with the gear much better.
It still started skipping when doing a print. It was looking like 220 was a little cool for the filament since I could see tooth marks in the filament extruded into the air. I turned it up to 230 (This is with a J-HEAD) and got a maxtemp warning at 230. I had set the MAXTEMP much higher in the firmware, but it didn't seem to make a difference. Then I realized that even though it said "Done Uploading" in Arduino, it really hadn't because I didn't move the avrdude.conf when reloading Arduino. That also explained why I couldn't fix the endstops in firmware, so of course when I did get the firmware to upload they were set the wrong way.
I could finally heat to 230, but as soon as I started printing it kept losing power which points to a bad connection somewhere. Using the multimeter I found a break in one of the wires leading from the hot end connector to the board. I cut, soldered and shrinkwrapped it, which restored the connection. However I still couldn't get power, and tracked down another break in the connection between the resistor leg of the JHead and the wire that leads to the connector. I had half-assed it with just solder and shrink tubing, without putting a crimp on for stability. I redid it with the crimp, but had to work with it mounted to the extruder because I couldn't heat it enough to get the filament out.
I finally have the printer running again after several nights of freezing my ass off in the garage until midnight. I've learned a lot since getting a printer, though maybe only enough to be dangerous. Still I'm pretty confident in my ability to troubleshoot most issues at this point.



