Topic: Solidoodle no longer connecting on USB?
I just printed out a replacement for the acrylic cover that has the ability to mount fans on it.
I unplugged the power cable and the usb cable and then unscrewed the mounting screws. I placed the new cover on and reassembled it (screwed it all back onto the back of the solidoodle.
I reconnect the power and usb cables.
The board's green light is on and steady.
Now when i try to connect the solidoodle it errors when trying to connect saying it's not found.
I change COM to virtual printer and refresh the ports. Now Nothing but Virtual Printer is able to be selected.
How does this happen? I print something to hopefully increase the life of the board and now it just doesn't work?
Please help.
Got this printer 8 months ago so there's no chance of warranty. (not that they have one anyways).
There wasn't any smoke or sparks when swapping out the covers.
EDIT:
Possible causes:
- I unplugged the usb cable from the board without pressing "disconnect" in repetier, maybe the computer is confused? I closed and restarted repetier multiple times and it still can't find a connection.
- Somehow some residue electricity cause shorts when metal spaces fall and hit stuff (but that's why i unplugged all power sources).
Attempts to fix:
- Restarting computer. Hopefully it will work.
UPDATE: (some how works now?)
After computer restarted I plugged in a new usb cable. I also turned up the volume on laptop to check if it makes that "du-dew!" noise when usb is connected. It made that noise so the usb driver on the board should still be working.
Start up repetierhost and it still could not find it after clicking on refresh.
Closed repetierhost and started it up again (trying to brute force it?) go to config and I find that COM5 is there. Weird.
So glad that the board didn't fry. Now i'm questioning whether to put that cover plate on again or not test my luck.
UPDATE 2:
Extruder and Heat Bed won't heat up.
Extruder temp stays at 23 deg C, Heated Bed says it's at 315 deg C and Starts dropping when turned on (how does this make sense? I didn't unplug anything.
Lessons learned: Unscrewing 4 bolts and unplugging the usb cable and power cable puts a halt to 8 months of perfectly fine operation.
Crappy new driver board that has soldered on driver chips and atmega so if anything fries the whole thing gets trashed instead replacing $5 driver chips or $3 atmega.
