On 6/16/2013 6:57 AM, Ed Nisley wrote:
> On 06/16/2013 04:24 AM, Erik Christiansen wrote:
>> current  printer implementations just drag the spool
>   > with the filament feed capstan
>
> It's brutally simple: the filament drive hauls filament through a
> flexible tube that arches between a holder at the spool and the
> extruder, so the drive must overcome the tension required to unroll the
> spool plus the friction required to drag the filament:
>
> http://softsolder.com/2013/04/24/makergear-m2-filament-guide-tube-friction/

Great blog. I like your 'voice'.
> Bowden drives put the feed at the spool end of the guide tube, which
> makes retraction less effective.
>
>> a couple of microswitches
> The gotcha is that the filament loop thrashes around as the extruder
> head zips back and forth. On the M2, that's only along the X axis, but
> printers like the Ultimaker and Replicator move the extruder along both
> X and Y. I'm not sure where the sensor would be happiest, because you
> don't want to constrain the loop motion too much: pinning it to a board
> at the top of the arch might be too confining.
>

Two thoughts (based on zero run-time experience with my own almost but 
never quite ready for prime time 3D printer).

-Does relocating the filament spool above the printer to straighten out 
the filament path help? I notice some people do this and others don't.
-Before vacuum-base tape-handling systems came into common usage, 
spring-loaded idler arms possibly with micro limit switches were used to 
advantage in tape decks. Have you given any consideration to such in 
your efforts?

Regards,
Kent


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows:

Build for Windows Store.

http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev
_______________________________________________
Emc-users mailing list
Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users

Reply via email to