On Wednesday 03 June 2020 19:17:14 Chris Albertson wrote:

> You are going to have to post a photo.  First off, I hope you are
> printing these pulleys flat,  With rotational axis vertical.  I hate
> to ask but with no photos we don't even know this.
>
> Assuming you are, the teeth are called "walls" and only if bubbles are
> in the plastic would you get voids.    Print slower or maybe cooler. 
> The outer wall layers should run at maybe 30 mm / second.
>
> Here is a cell-phone shot of a 30T GT2 profile pulley that has been
> sitting around on my desk for a couple weeks.  It is dirty and the
> flanges need to be cleaned up with a small nail file.     The walls
> are made in the direction of motion and are smooth enough.  It is a
> 3mm tooth pitch by 9mm wide.    I think this one was printed on "draft
> mode" with 0.2mm layer height.   This is from an Anet A6 printer with
> default settings in Cura. A steel hub goes in the 20mm hole.  THe gear
> was downloaded from SPD/SI website than modified in Fusion 360
>
> [image: IMG_0542.jpg]
Thats a heck of a lot nicer looking, and 10x smoother than what I have in 
my hand from this afternoons run.  That said, an XL belt fits it nicely.  
So this one is usable for a test fit mock up except the slot for the nut 
is about a 20% infill.  One might be able to epoxy it to the motor shaft 
with JBWeld. But despite 2mm walls around the hub, I can feel the 
elasticity and that bothers me.  And while I can sort of see the solid 
walls around the nut pocket, I have serious doubts of ever getting a 
decent grip because it will open up from the outward pressure the nut 
would exert.

So I'll probably use this as the motor pulley while I am mocking up the 
real drive, the next stage being a hubless, larger model, which will be 
epoxied to a smallish possibly herringboned gear, driving a much higher 
tooth count matching gear on the worm shaft. The herringbone may get 
lost in the translation to metal for the final parts though.

I set up a "raft" for this one, and made it 15mm bigger than the hub, and 
it was 30 minutes just laying the raft. 4 layers.  Bed cold, I wiggled 
the putty knife under it, popped it off, then the raft separated nicely 
just like cura said it would. I upped the speed to 60mm/sec but I don't 
think it ever moved that fast. But I think a 5mm skirt would be ok and 
20 minutes faster.

Now I need to make some parallels so I can lay it down on the mill table 
without taking out all the lock levers etc, and drill and tap for the 
axle the intermediate stuff will turn on.  Then make the shaft out of 
some .500" A2, figuring on some 8mm ID bearings if torrington makes 
their needle cartridges that small, I haven't checked yet.  Need the 
smallest to make room for the relay gear to the bigger gear on the worm 
shaft.

I got the motor adapter yesterday, a 34 to a 23, and I'll need to get 
another alu pulley with an 8mm bore to drive the Sheldons Z with the 
other motor.  Same tooth count, should move the Sheldon ok and 60 db 
quieter that the 1600 oz/in doing it now.  If I ever get a knee mill, it 
would make a good knee motor.  Better yet, somebody should make me an 
offer for it. 14mm shaft.

Thanks Chris.

> On Wed, Jun 3, 2020 at 1:37 PM Gene Heskett <[email protected]> 
wrote:
> > On Wednesday 03 June 2020 14:54:31 Chris Albertson wrote:
> >
> >
> > The pulley teeth are very low density, mostly air with a filament
> > bridge at a 45 degree angle.  How do solidify the teeth? What I'm
> > getting would cut up an XL belt in an hours work, its that sharp.

Cheers, Gene Heskett
-- 
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
 - Louis D. Brandeis
Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene>


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