Grass@sh.itjust.worksto3DPrinting@lemmy.world•This High-Resolution, Non-Contact Filament Sensor Improves Print QualityEnglish
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15 hours agoI mean this
I mean this
I’m glad that design has been seeing development. My next build I’m probably going to be voron based but instead of aluminum extrusion bolted together it will be welded steel. I need to way more weld mileage to get my money’s worth from the welder and the aluminum beams are weirdly expensive
I want to rip off bambu’s eddy current nozzle pressure sensor but measuring eddy currents is confusing
well if a luigi copycat appears in the news and they find on him a fake ID naming him mario nintendioni, you know its me…
With what I have now seen about him, I would be quite inclined to agree.
I can’t access the link. who is he?
I dont know how effective this sensor is, but if its as good as they want people to believe then a number of “unicorn chasing” mods like filament width/diameter sensors, or just tuning of pa and extrusion multiplier at all could become unnecessary. I don’t have any bambu printers, let alone models with the sensor, so I don’t actually know how good it is.
Currently I waste a chunk of time and maybe a buck of filament per roll on extrusion multiplier calibration. width sensors can mitigate it well enough most of the time but they all have the same limitation of oval sections being possible to read two ways. A nozzle pressure sensor would also be the ideal companion to a pellet extruder.
If I didn’t have to dedicate most of my waking life to my shitty job to stay alive, I’d probably be buying a bunch of parts and giving money to pcbway or jlcpcb and making a bunch of shitty failures of trying to replicate the functionality.