Re: Filament Extruder - Convert pellets to filament
justnick wrote:Here's some pics of my beta. What kind of variation are folks seeing in filament diameter?
Pipe slot was cut exactly to spec, but ended up a little too close to the flange when the hopper was added. Using T nuts and washers allowed the hopper to be placed closer to the flange. Next time I would preinstall the pipe in the flange and measure out where to place the slot.
Used an 11/32" x 3/8 drive socket with a 3/8" brass strip to engage the D shaft section of the gearbox.
Had 0.030" of run out on my pipe flanges. Didn't want to dink around with shims or offseting the wood supports so I cheated and trued the surfaces on the lathe. Screwed the flanges onto the pipe and chucked the pipe. Worked great.
Every report I've seen has been just about +/-0.03mm @ tav.
The slot is a bit close to the flange, depending on how tight you get the pipe, and whether you notch the hopper for the nuts. The t-nuts are a great idea!Did you not have a 9mm socket and washer (key) in your kit? I might have run out when shipping yours, it was one of the last ones.
I think you're the first to lathe the flanges! I intentionally left the design unconstrained, so perfectly flat flanges aren't a requirement. Cool that you have the materials to do it, though!
I just got lazy on the flanges. Tightened the heck out of it on the pipe and took small cuts on the inside flange surface to keep it from tightening down on the cutting tool. BTW instead of taking a pipe wrench to the flange to tighten it, I put two 1/4" bolts through the flange holes and grabbed the shoulders of the bolts in a vise. Pipe wrench on the pipe.
I had the 3/8" x 3/8" drive socket in my kit. The washer was undersize on Kobalt brand socket from Lowes. The 11/32" was $0.50 cheaper and a better fit on the hex shaft than the 9mm. I tried adjusting the size of the washer with a large hammer. Over did it and made it too big (and flatter). Then I tried making it smaller. Then I went for the brass strip. ![]()
Especially while running at lower temps, I have noticed the motor lugging down and the current increasing from ~0.26A to ~0.32A for 10-15 seconds. Need to figure out what is happening and if that correlates with a diameter variation.
Another variable which would get fixed with a 12V heater is power supply variation. My 120V varies from 122.5 to 118V over a period of minute(s). That is a 7.7% power variation that the PID has to compensate for, which starts to become an issue when the PID sample time is set to 20seconds. Also need to think about relay contact lifetime. Present PID is rated better than 50k cycles 1A 250V resistive (cycling every 20 seconds) 11.5 days. Not sure how the 250V translates to 120V, and current is less so tough to say. You are already at 200+ hours....?

