1 (edited by davecl9001 2015-11-15 23:13:07)

Topic: Loud noise with X-axis movement

Hi all, I have a stock Solidoodle 3.  I am experiencing really loud, grinding-like noise when the x-axis move.  This appears to be loud when it is moving at full speed.  Homing seems to be okay as it is low speed--though i feel it can be smoother/quieter compared to the y-axis.

The things I've tried so far:

  • lubing the rods
    tightened the screws
    tightened the belt (but not entirely as im afraid it might snap, will work more on this area)
    adjusted voltage to the x-axis

Everything is currently stock, I haven't switch to lawsy's carriages yet as I do not want to spend more money on new rods.  I know I can reuse the old ones but that requires destroying the current carriages.

In regards to the voltages, the x-axis originally had 0.65V and so I adjusted it down to .443 as closely as I can as per solidoodle wiki.  The other interesting thing is that the pots were reversed on mine.  Clockwise on this one is lowering the voltages while counter clockwise is higher voltage.  I know I did not reverse the polarity when probing because my Fluke would have showed negative voltage.  Is this normal?  What voltage should I have it set to?

Does anyone have other suggestions?

Thanks

2

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

That noise can be caused by:
*Overextrusion. If this only happens on one axis over various prints, we can more than likely rule this out.
*Overheating X motor. Is the motor too hot to touch for a couple seconds? If so, add a fan and double check your X VREF. All boards, drivers, and motors will be different. So voltages are intended as a guiding point and not a gospel.
*X belt is stretching. I JUST dealt with this on a Y belt on one of my machines. If this is you cause, try 80lb braided fishing line as a replacement. For 100ft it is far cheaper than to buy new MXL/GT2 belts.

As a side note, order the new rods ASAP. If needed, I can ship you new Lawsy carriages...the stock SD carriages are garbage printed with 40% infill, so you aren't losing out...only gaining! smile Just order the rods and some LM8UU linear bearings. If you can't print the new carriages, let us know as we have a great community here.

Printit Mason and Printit Horizon printers
Multiple SD2s- Bulldog XL, E3D v5/v6/Lite6, Volcano, Hobb Goblin, Titan, .9 motor, Lawsy carriages, direct Y drive, fishing line...the list goes on
Filawinder and Filastruder #1870.....worth every penny!

3

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

Thanks so much for the offer.  Interestingly, I only printed a couple sets of MK5's as backup but not the carriages.  The noise occurs when even not printing when manually issuing movement commands. So I think we can rule out over extrusion for sure.

Anyway, I forgot to mention that the X motor does have a fan with this mount I printed:

http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:128526

This is one of the first things I've done as I noticed it was very hot to the touch after a print.

A few further questions:
- how do I check the X VREF?  Is it the same method as I did with probing one of the pins on the stepper chip?
- how can I tell/test for x-belt is stretching?  I was considering on unhooking the belt and running the motor to rule out any fault with the motor in case there are internal issues with it.  I will do this soon when i get around to tinkering it.
- what do you recommend on the rods to get on amazon?  in particular, the rod length as I do not have tools to cut it to length.

i am trying to keep costs at the minimal because i already spent some money buying this second hand and pouring more money into it would put me into buyers remorse sad.  not to mention, i've been planning for the e3d upgrade for some months now.

4

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

Forgot to mention, I have the Rev E board

5

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

davecl9001 wrote:

Forgot to mention, I have the Rev E board

If you move the axis by hand when power is not applied does it move as easy as the other?

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

6

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

Yes, it moves just fine by hand as far as I can tell.
I'm now on the fence whether or not to throw more money on this machine or just get a new one (and put this one up for adoption).  I know that no printer is perfect and there will always be tinkering.  But this machine has been non-stop maintenance. When it works though, it works great.

I will try some things later in the day once I find the time.  Will report back later.

7

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

Just an update:

the skinny:
the problem is now resolved by upping the voltage on the pots

the long:
- I removed the belt and let the motor spin freely by itself and it also made the really loud noises which leads me to believe that the problem is isolated to the motor and not the belts/carriages
- I adjusted the pots to up the voltage to the motor as lowering it before didn't help but made the problem worse IIRC.
- The voltage ends up being somewhere in the 0.85V.  I think this is safe voltage as I read a lot of people running it at 1V.  However, this is twice the limit of what solidoodle recommends.  But as AZERATE mentioned, voltages are just a guiding point.

Now onto my next set of problems to tackle:
- moire on prints. i guess the voltages to the extruder motor is either too high or too low..  any suggestions on which way to go ?  at the moment the moire is minimal and doesn't bother me THAT much (but it does bother me sometimes smile )
- warped aluminum build plate (so far solved this by using glass and only clamping on 1 side of the plate as clamping both sides would flex the glass--yes the plate is warped as much as 1mm which drove me nuts initially when trying to level it).

thanks everyone for all their help and suggestions.  i hope this post may help the next person as well.

8

Re: Loud noise with X-axis movement

davecl9001 wrote:

Now onto my next set of problems to tackle:
1. - moire on prints. i guess the voltages to the extruder motor is either too high or too low..  any suggestions on which way to go ?  at the moment the moire is minimal and doesn't bother me THAT much (but it does bother me sometimes smile )
2. - warped aluminum build plate (so far solved this by using glass and only clamping on 1 side of the plate as clamping both sides would flex the glass--yes the plate is warped as much as 1mm which drove me nuts initially when trying to level it).

thanks everyone for all their help and suggestions.  i hope this post may help the next person as well.

1. I would try turning it down just a little and see how things go - remember, tiny adjustments can have a big impact, so dont get too happy with the driver...

2. get the clips off the glass. if you still have the kapton tape on the aluminum, try using hairspray to stick the glass to the existing bed.
spray the bottom of the glass with the hairspray, set the glass on the bed and heat to about 60C for a couple of minutes. then turn heater off and let it cool completely. repeat one or two more times if needed - the glass should be stuck in place with no need of clips to hold it.
This method works very well for me. I have not needed to re-do in several months it is stuck down so well.

SD4 #1 & #2 - Lawsy carriages, E3D v6, Rumba controller board, mirror bed plate, X motor fan, upgraded PSU & Mica bed heater
SD4 #3 - in the works ~ Folgertech FT-5, rev 1
Printit Industries Beta Tester - Horizon H1