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Dec 2016

My filament sometimes gets/got tangled, then this might be useful. Manually untangling works too. A good spool holder helps a lot to prevent tangles too.

I agree that having 2 motors pushing filament isn’t the best idea. If they aren’t pushing filament in exactly the same amount, at some point the slack would either get tight or too much slack, both dangers with prints needing long filament. I did not know you needed same length cable and thank you for teaching me that. I still dont understand the lenght of cable requirement but I will do some research now and learn some more today.

I think my problem is best solved by making a smooth ball-bearing spool holder, which I want to design and print on my 3d printer so my worry and problem is resolved. btw i am also wanting to make a bigger 3d printer but my only concern is I don’t know how to calibrate the x,y and z axis. I heard of some way to change firmware, compile and upload but I never did that before and searching how to do it.

Hi

You will need to recalibrate your Extruder feed regardless of why it is different.

Using some software like Pronterface you can ask the printer to extruder 10mm of filament. Do this and then measure how much filament you actually get. Probably best if you cut the filament level with a face such as the end of your PTFE tubing first as it makes it easier to measure. Worth noting that you do this cold and with the filament removed from the nozzle.

After you have worked out the shortage or extra filament you then need to adjust the extruder steps by the same ratio. e.g. 8.5mm when asking for 10mm gives;

8.5/10 = 0.85

Then multiple your extruder steps by this amount and set the new value. The steps value will most likely be around ~80 to ~110 and you can set it in the menu system or by updating your firmware - sometime doing it by menu doesn’t get saved for later.

There are some good YouTube videos on calibration that are worth watching.

Cheers

Dave

I’m thinking a small loop of slack that can hit a switch when it gets tighter. The switch runs power to a DC motor (no stepper driver required).
spool_motor.png

There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with push-pull extruder setups, it’s a trick regularly used in the welding world to negate the friction in the bowden tube and allow less clamping pressure on soft wire/filament to prevent distortion causing issues elsewhere. Quad driven rollers are often used on single drive units too for wire over 1-1.2mm
However, your stepper driver should be current clamping, so wiring them in parrallel will give them only half the current each, if you have enough voltage overhead (steppers are usually a very low nominal voltage and your driver uses all the extra to maintain current draw when microstepping and similar), then wiring the two in series shouldn’t hurt performance anywhere near as much.
You should set your tension so the reel extruder always slips first. In fact ideally you should just run a pair of smooth driven wheels on them that are 1-2% larger than the nozzle one, and just set them soft enough to slip slightly, this way they’ll always be helping the nozzle extruder without causing any damage to the wire before the feed tubes.