3D Printers

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Revision as of 19:42, 29 June 2014 by F3ndot (talk | contribs) (→‎Machine Status and Important Notices: Re-Add link text below images)
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Machine Status and Important Notices

 
Ultimaker 1
 
Ultimaker 2
 
Type A
 
Makerbot
Status Operational Nearly-Operational Operational Operational
Material 3mm PLA only 3mm PLA only 1.75mm PLA only 3mm ABS only
Hardware state Good. Minor backlash observed. Hardware: 90% complete
Good. Cooling fan cowling may need some work Good.
Software state Usable, prints pause momentarily and frequently due to Raspi slowness Prontserve not yet installed on 'ultimaker2' host machine Usable, prints pause momentarily/frequently due to Raspi slowness, some issues with long print jobs randomly failing. Good (Grab latest Cura profile from github [1])
Pending tasks Fix prontserve on the raspberry pi Install prontserve on ultimaker2 host machine None PID tuning, bed wobble, wavvy ABP.

Printer-specific pages

Print specific pages include details about the machines, maintenance logs, and workflows.


3D Printer Workflow at the Hacklab

The hacklab 3d printers are set up using the Construct Protocol which allows 3d printers to be used over the local network. The users personal computers are not required to be physically connected to the printers during the duration of the print, and allows for users to continue working on other projects without fear of print interruptions, etc. Construct only acts as the gcode sending layer, which means the user still has to generate the gcode based on an STL file.

Software

  • Tegh is the construct client used to access 3d printers attached to host machines running prontserve. You can get tegh here: Tegh Installation Instructions.
  • Ultimaker: CURA is the software used to generate gcode for the Ultimakers. You can get it here: CURA download link
  • Cupcake: Also works with cura, but you'll have to download the profile on hacklab's github page, and edit Cura's machine dimentions to match.
  • Type A: Gcode is generated via KISSlicer using a profile maintained by Will

Quick Start Instructions

  1. Generate gcode from an STL using printer-specific software.
  2. Open tegh, select printer by IP address (written on each 3d printer)
  3. Upload gcode to printer via 'add_job (path_to_file.gcode)'
  4. Set extruder temperature via 'set temp e0: 220'
  5. Start print job when at temperature via 'print'

Command details via the 'help' command, and on the Construct Protocol page.

Troubleshooting

Physical Problems

  • Print not sticking to bed
    • Check bed levelness
    • Check print bed distance to print head
    • Reapply fresh blue tape (Interpolymer Group brand for PLA printers only)
  • Extruder no longer extruding filament
    • Check filament feeder for ground plastic preventing extrusion
    • Check gcode generator settings to ensure proper filament properties selected (diameter, density)
    • Inspect hot-end for plugs by manual extrusion at temperature
    • Check filament feeder spring pressure (WARNING: DO NOT ADJUST THIS UNLESS YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING, THIS IS THE LAST STEP)
  • Extrusion is discontinuous
    • Check filament feeder for ground plastic preventing full continuous extrusion
  • Print has random blobs due to pausing of printer mid extrusion
    • Known bug in prontserve due to bottleneck in Raspberry pi I/O. Print simpler file or directly control printer via USB/pronterface

Software Problems

  • tegh
    • Temperature stops updating after estop command issued
      • Known bug, ssh to host machine, screen -r, ctrl-C, python2 prontserve.py to restart prontserve.
    • Printer auto-discovery did not work.
      • Restart prontserve: ssh to host machine, screen -r, ctrl-C, python2 prontserve.py to restart prontserve.
    • tegh discovers no printers on network
      • Check firewall settings
      • Verify on internal networks: 192.168.111.x or 192.168.113.x