1 (edited by digiprint 2013-03-07 20:23:48)

Topic: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

1.) Is the differential level of the bed normal? Asking because I leveled the bed and then it looks like this.
2.) Is the "gap" in y-axis on right intented? I'm able to lift (move up and down, just a little) the construction on the right side. I know there is some space for movement but I'm currently checking all angles and so on. A noob is asking for help smile

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2

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

I would try to get that axis as close to 90 degrees square to the z rods by moving the white blocks in your last pic then level your bed. you should be able to loosen up the screws holding the blocks then adjust them if you can't move them enough you might have to take them out and do a little work on em'... drill, file, whatever it takes to move that end up far enough to square that up as it looks pretty far out.

3 (edited by digiprint 2013-03-08 20:39:12)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

I checked the two white blocks. The block under the rod can be moved but the white block above is fixed so I'm not able to rise the y-axis.
Or did you just say that I should take the block out and drill a bigger hole?
I just don't want to kill my hardware  smile

Update: Drilled the hole bigger. Checked everything with a level. My carriage is out of boundary. Everything else is leveled but not my carriage. Is there an alternative to the wood? Can't understand why they use wood for the carriage.

4

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

If you have reduced the y axis gap and then bed is leveled to the print head I would say that is as good as you're going to get it.

From the pictures around the forum and my own printer the wood bed frames all look a bit off square but as long as the bed is leveled to the print head and the bed goes up and down without sticking then it should be fine.

I guess with the latest pictures of the test ali bed frame they are addressing the wood situation but as there are plenty of other printers out there made of wood it must be stable enough for consistent quality prints.

5 (edited by ronsii 2013-03-09 04:10:27)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

The wood part under the print bed doesn't really matter the main thing is the actual aluminum print bed. The way your pics looked I figured that your guide rods(the ones on the axis with the white blocks) were not perpendicular to the Z axis rods... if this is the case while it will still print ok the actual print will be skewed(not square in the vertical axis). So you need to find an accurate way to square the z rods to the x rods(rods that the print head is on) once this is done then relevel the print bed and you should have nice straight prints.

Well a picture is worth 1000 words right in my case it is probably more wink

So I threw this sketch together to make sure we're talking about the same things...

http://i.imgur.com/Bl38WDF.jpg

The blue is the Z axis rods
The yellow is the X axis rods

6 (edited by digiprint 2013-03-09 06:17:06)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

Thanks for the picture :-)
I do understand what you are saying. Is there a practical way of comparing the angle of y and x?

How can I change the angle. Everthing is fixed as far as I know and checked the constructiom

7

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

The white block give you the ability to change the angle between z and x, as they let you rise or lower the end mount of the x rods.

As for checking them I don't know what kind of squares you have on hand... but any small to medium sized quick square or machinists 1-2-3 blocks can be used or for that matter and square block that is about 2x4x2 inches or bigger but still able to fit inside the printer between the bed and the rods, just move the carriage all the way back and hold the block against the z rod(right) and move it up until it touches the x rod... with some light shining through it you should be able to detect a very small difference and thereby which way to adjust the white blocks.

8

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

Ronsii thanks for the help sorry to sound like a jerk, I am frustrated. Here I am printing now and you can see straight then a kick. I have it dialed in now (I think) appears moving straight up over 1" now BUT still leaning or kicking back slightly. I know tension is critical but come on why now? what am I missing.

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-sYqLKhCqxug/UTrbWOH7TsI/AAAAAAAAArg/B29o-Z-o07g/s848/Photo+Mar+09%2C+1+45+36+AM.jpg

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-MR5pz4matrE/UTrbWLFfzyI/AAAAAAAAArc/g00NRH_CmGc/s848/Photo+Mar+09%2C+1+45+45+AM.jpg

SD2 owner- Surestepr, filament holder,QUBD servo and heaters, glass bed
Print for fun and for parts for my sports cars
current car is 88 IROC

9 (edited by ronsii 2013-03-09 07:03:49)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

Hey JJcuff1, Don't worry about it smile I know how things get when you expect something to work and it doesn't... I work on a lot of machinery big and small and sometimes I wish I had a few pounds of C4 around wink heh he heh

So, you said you can turn one of the pulleys against the collar??? and even remove it! this is not right they are supposed to be a solid unit pressed and glued together. If they slip it will cause problems like you having in the pictures.

10

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

well I will check if they are slipping, now that you mentioned it I do think think they are all fixed.
I am still printing that tall piece and at the top now it is till wavy and go forward just so odd? I mean I can not image belts that critical to tension (like within 1 turn) then x4 screws shit its a nightmare. should have enough torque to drive through it. like it did before all last week for me

SD2 owner- Surestepr, filament holder,QUBD servo and heaters, glass bed
Print for fun and for parts for my sports cars
current car is 88 IROC

11

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

I wonder if the problem could entirely be the Z axis.  The squishing makes it look like there are times it is not moving down when it should.  Plastic gets extruded onto the same layer again, stacking it up high enough for the nozzle to catch on cause skipped steps.  If you step the Z axis down .1 at a time, does it move every time?  Also is Z lift set to 0 in your retraction settings?

12

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

The tension shouldn't be super critical...Have you seen the belt tensioner on thingiverse? http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:38952 Ian made it up or just tape 10 quarters together with a piece of wire bend a hook on one end about 3-4 inches up and hang it in the center on the belt, right now I just taped 10 quarters together and got about one third deflection, from 13mm(without quarters) to about 9mm(with quarters) between the top and bottom of the belt measured at center of belt with the carriage all the way in the front of the printer.

13 (edited by ronsii 2013-03-09 17:37:42)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

digiprint wrote:

Thanks for the picture :-)
I do understand what you are saying. Is there a practical way of comparing the angle of y and x?

How can I change the angle. Everthing is fixed as far as I know and checked the constructiom


Ok Digiprint, The methods I was giving you for squaring were somewhat tricky if you don't have the right tools or haven't done this kind of thing before... So here is a much easier way and should suffice for the accuracy needed for the SD printer, since the case is very rigid and unless it has been bent by falling off a 3 story building or ran over by a car it should be square enough to use to set the x axis smile you will need a wood dowel or something similar cut to about 9.25 inches(actual length should fit snug between the left side of the carriage rods(yellow) and the floor of the printer)
http://i.imgur.com/rOaxq4f.jpg
once you have the dowel so that it fits the left side move it to the right side and adjust the white blocks so it fits the same as the left. While this is not the 'perfect' way to align the axis it will be more than adequate for the design.

I should also mention when adjusting the carriage use the top white block to set the height of the carriage once that is tightened then bring the lower block up so it almost touches.

14

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

ian I did re do the z axis nut and z wobble and walked the carriage up and down and it appears to move, that squish and blob is from the pause, each time I paused to adjust tension and you can see byt the top it improved. I think it is belt tension but crazy it is this critical. I an not drum tight but each belt is taut hard to get the same, I readjusted my back pulleys again so they do not shift the rod side to side maybe I am way too tight I should go loose

SD2 owner- Surestepr, filament holder,QUBD servo and heaters, glass bed
Print for fun and for parts for my sports cars
current car is 88 IROC

15

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

The belts need to only be tight enough that the teeth won't slip.  The back rod is mounting in bushings rather than roller bearings, and the idler pulleys in front spin freely on bolts rather than mounted on a rod spinning in bearings.  As a result, the more you tighten the belts, the harder it gets for the rod to spin in the bushings and the idlers to spin on their bolts.  That increases backlash and reduces accuracy.

The belts also need to be the same tension on each side.  That was the purpose of the tension gauge I posted to Thingiverse.  You can see if they both deflect the same number of notches on the gauge rather than going by feel or sound when you pluck them.   Loosening the set screws and letting the pulleys spin on the rod a little bit will also let them align so that there are the same number of belt teeth between the pulley and the sliders.

16

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

ronsii wrote:
digiprint wrote:

Thanks for the picture :-)
I do understand what you are saying. Is there a practical way of comparing the angle of y and x?

How can I change the angle. Everthing is fixed as far as I know and checked the constructiom


Ok Digiprint, The methods I was giving you for squaring were somewhat tricky if you don't have the right tools or haven't done this kind of thing before... So here is a much easier way and should suffice for the accuracy needed for the SD printer, since the case is very rigid and unless it has been bent by falling off a 3 story building or ran over by a car it should be square enough to use to set the x axis smile you will need a wood dowel or something similar cut to about 9.25 inches(actual length should fit snug between the left side of the carriage rods(yellow) and the floor of the printer)
http://i.imgur.com/rOaxq4f.jpg
once you have the dowel so that it fits the left side move it to the right side and adjust the white blocks so it fits the same as the left. While this is not the 'perfect' way to align the axis it will be more than adequate for the design.

I should also mention when adjusting the carriage use the top white block to set the height of the carriage once that is tightened then bring the lower block up so it almost touches.

This is quickly becoming my favorite image on Soliforum.

Former Solidoodle employee, no longer associated with the company.

17 (edited by digiprint 2013-03-12 19:41:03)

Re: Warped bed/carriage and y-axis gap

Thank you ronsii!
I'm very pleased with my new setup.