The adventure continues....
I have been blessed with a really forgiving machine for the past few weeks. The machine seems to print well and has been a great deal of fun to work with. As far as printed parts go, I have only had trouble reproducing one part... the rod end for the new robot arm. The rod end needed a lot of attention and took the better part of a week to print three of them. Such a small part and such a huge problem. Anyway, lets look at some pictures.
The carbon fiber tubes finally arrived. The 6mm OD tubes had to be cut to length before they could be fitted with the ends. Putting these together was a breeze .
The 15mm tubes also had to be cut to length, but that wasn't really and issue. The problem was the 15mm tubes had an inside diameter of 11mm and the rod end that fit inside them was a lot larger. Still not much of an issue. I went ahead and modified the rod end with TinkerCAD and down loaded the revised part. This new part absolutely would not print. Most of the printing problem can be attributed to the failing surface of the build plate. The build plate surface was starting to become detached and the part would detach from the surface 3/4 through the print. I somehow managed to get two of the three rod ends printed before the build surface failed completely. The last part took three full evenings to figure out how to print.
QiDi replacement build surface sheets are in rout but in the future I'm thinking of using a PEI sheet...we'll cross that bridge soon.
This is the last of the three rod ends. I tried everything to get this one to print... brims, rafts and lots of glue.... nothing worked....so I cheated. I redesigned the part to be 3/8 inch shorter, thus reducing the print time and when I awoke on Saturday morning this is the result. Meh, the slightly shorter part ain't going to be an issue.
Fail, fail, fail, fail, fail, fail, fail, fail, Success!
....and here is the arm fully assembled. This arm features miniature ball bearings on every joint and the herringbone gears provide nearly zero backlash. Figure something like this would cost about a hundred bucks in purchased parts to complete. I recycled some of the parts from the orange arm so my cost was a bit less.
Another shot of the arm...
Arm all wired up and running g-code. I wrote a few macros to validate the arm has repeatable motion... and it does! The only minor issue is the servo for the gripper is acting funny. Once I sort ot the servo problem I'll shoot a video.
Stay tuned!