Hol, were you able to find some tape? If not I can order some from Amazon
and get it with free 2-day shipping.
Any idea what width?
On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 2:35 PM, Hol Gaskill <hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
the new heating resistors came in - to anyone
who's interested in
replacing the heating element, i'll be doing it before next week's meeting
unless someone is itching to handle it themselves before then. It does
require kapton tape from what i've read - anyone have a few inches of that
stuff lying around?
Nov 2, 2013 09:58:15 AM, steveberl(a)gmail.com wrote:
Is the tape wrapped around the hot end anything special?
Steve
On Saturday, November 2, 2013, Hol Gaskill wrote:
al lashers is great! they don't stay open late enough for me to go there
after work though, so i usually get this kind of stuff online.
it is 12vdc so the LED warning is easily
done. for AC you could still
just use one LED at just under 50% duty cycle and it'll block the reverse
current.
i don't know about all that empirical
stuff - say you want 3V at the LED
at 30mA, that's a 9V drop over the series resistor and R=V/I=9V/.03A = 300
ohm resistor. could also just slap a chunk of 12V led strip down and call
it a day - definitely bright!
i would be curious to know if the problem
resulted from simply being left
on or what. the fan was not running iirc so that could have had alot to do
with it, will have to check that as part of the repair - for now i'm just
going to get these
http://www.amazon.com/Resistor-Heating-Element-Printer-RepRap/dp/B00C44TBPA
jake i'd be interested in learning
more about how to tune the PID
settings. no idea about the temperature sensing status since it stayed at
room temperature, didn't think to use body heat or anything to test it but
that'll be an easy enough check. i did not check the thermistor (or is it
a thermocouple?) for continuity.
cheers,
hol
Nov 1, 2013 05:45:36 PM,
g2g-public01(a)att.net wrote:
Yo's-
And/or you can take the existing
fried resistor to Al Lasher's
Electronics on University Ave in
Berkeley and they'll find a
replacement, either exact-same or very
close (the tolerances on
resistors used as heaters are pretty
wide). If it's a 3 to 5 watt
resistor it shouldn't cost more
than a couple bucks.
Al Lasher's is an oldschool
electronics shop that everyone in SR
ought to know about: their stock of
raw component parts is
fantastic, and the folks who work
there have been around forever
& know their stuff. You'll
probably find stuff there that
suggests new projects to do.
Chances are if you bring in the
heat sink with the resistor glued
on, they'll also be able to tell
you what kind of glue is needed,
and they probably have it in stock
along with the resistor.
Re. putting an LED on the
heating element:
Good idea and will need a
dropping resistor ahead of the LED,
otherwise the LED will probably fry
the first time it's turned on.
If the voltage used to run the heater
resistor is AC, then wire two
LEDs together, one in reverse polarity
with respect to the other,
and they'll both light up.
To estimate the value for the
dropping resistor, measure the voltage
input to the heater resistor and the
current it draws (after you
replace it with one that works), and
compare with the specs for the
LEDs you're using. If the
dropping resistor or the LEDs get warm
when in use (aside from ambient heat
from the heater resistor), or
the LEDs are excessively bright,
substitute a higher value dropping
resistor.
If I was doing this, I'd
just go empirical and use a large variable
resistor in series with the LEDs, and
turn it down slowly while in
operation, until the LEDs light up to
a sufficient degree (not dim
but not too bright), then measure the
value of the setting on the
variable resistor and find a fixed
resistor of similar or slightly
higher value.
Useful tools for these types of
purposes:
A resistance decade box, and a
capacitance decade box. These let
you do empirical tests by switching-in
progressively different
values of resistors and capacitors
into circuits until you get the
desired result. Lasher's probably
has at least a resistance decade
box in stock. The reason these are
called "decade boxes" is because
the traditional version has selectors
with ten positions each, and
the values of each selector increase
by factors of 10 relative to
the next lower selector on the box.
The exception to the use of
decade boxes is where a component
handles a large power level, such as a
heater resistor, or an
electrolytic capacitor in a power
supply. I'm guessing that your
heater resistor handles from 3 - 5
watts, but it may be more. The
resistors in decade boxes are
typically rated at 1/4 watt to 1/2
watt and are designed for testing
signal/control/audio circuits
rather than circuits that carry higher
power levels.
-G
=====
On 13-11-01-Fri 5:20 PM, Jake
wrote:
>I retract my assertion that you
hadn't put any text in
your email.
as for the printer, it seems
clear that you and steve are right
that the resistor is burned out. I
wonder what caused this - i
haven't heard of it happening a
lot bu on Nov 01, 2013, Jake
wrote:
Hol,
you forgot to put any
text in your post at all! please be
clear of how
you came to this
conclusion.
The heating element is
a resistor glued into a block of
metal on the end
of the extruder. It
has two wires which go to a connector
a couple inches
from it, and they go
back to the machine.
To test the heating
element, one can unplug this connector
and use a
multimeter to measure
its resistance. It should be
something like 8 ohms,
i don't know the
exact value but 100 is too much and
indicates it's bad.
it was replaced a
little while ago by a technician from
the corporation
that made it.
If the machine is
acting up about heating, we need to know
whether the
problem is with the
heating or the temperature sensing. If
the
temperature sensor is
reporting ambient temperature, it's
probably
working.
if the temp sensor is
working but the heating element
isn't making it heat
up, it could be the
heating element (see test above) or it
could be the
connector near it, or
the wires from there back to the
main board, or
where those wires
connect to the brain.
can you give more
information about what you tried and
what you observed?
-jake
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>--
>-steve