My printers do this from time to time where they just ignore everything i did tl make them work and start using factory values.

It always pisses me off but usually once i find which setting it is i put it to what it needs to be and it’s done.

It’s been 3 days of me giving my printer new e step values with zero result.

At first i adjusted the start gcode in cura but now i’m also using an empty print file with settings and it has no effect.

I have a 30:1 extruder and the values i used so far go from 92 all the way up to 33.000, it actually extruded more at 92 then it did at 33k. The extruded amount seems to be random compared to the e steps i put in, i don’t really know what is happening.

I checked the extruder gears and they look brand new.

  • ffhein
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    11 year ago

    Right, I forgot that they make other extruders than the BMG :) Sounds like the motor gear is press fit mounted on the shaft, which is great (as long as you don’t need to remove the gear).

    If you have the printer in parts, I suppose you could run some tests directly on the motor.

    First of all, I would recommend resetting the eeprom to the firmware’s default settings by issuing the following commands:

    M502   ; Reset to factory defaults
    M500   ; Save firmware to EEPROM
    

    Then, with the stepper motor not installed in the extruder, set esteps to 200 and instruct the printer to extrude 1 unit filament, to verify that the motor gear turns exactly 1 full turn in 1 second.

    M83   ; Set E stepper to "relative" coordinates
    M92 E200   ; Set E steps/unit to 200
    G1 E1 F60   ; Extrude 1 unit, with a feed rate of 60 units per minute = 1 unit per second.
    

    The reason I suggest setting e-steps to 200 for testing is because this stepper motor should require exactly 200 steps per revolution, according to this page. This should make the printer send 200 pulses to the stepper motor for each “unit” (very unlikely that your firmware is configured with something else than unit=millimeter) you tell it to extrude.

    If that works as expected, you can try setting esteps to 400, which should result in the motor gear making 2 full turns per unit you tell it to extrude.

    M83   ; Set E stepper to "relative" coordinates
    M92 E400   ; Set E steps/unit to 400
    G1 E1 F30   ; Extrude 1 unit, with a feed rate of 30 units per minute = 0.5 unit per second.
    

    I’m lowering the feed rate to make the rotation speed the same, i.e. it should make 2 full turns in 2 seconds now.

    If all of this is working, then it seems like your firmware/esteps behaves as expected, and you can set the correct e-steps for this extruder, which should be close to 415.

    M502   ; Reset firmware to factory default again, to make sure you aren't accidentally saving something else.
    M92 E415   ; Set E steps/unit to 415
    M500   ; Save firmware
    

    Also check your slicer start/end gcode so that it doesn’t contain any M50x commands that mess up the EEPROM.

    If the extruder is still acting up, at least you know that the firmware is probably ok :)

    Did you upgrade the extruder yourself btw? Did you adjust the stepper motor current to the correct value? Otherwise here’s a guide how to do that

    • @CrowAirbrush@lemm.eeOP
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      11 year ago

      If you’re wondering why i haven’t replied yet…a friend said it should be easy to put the 5 pro mainboard into my 5 plus, so i decided: “might as well as it’s already apart for upgrades and maintenance”

      Turns out it’s not that simple and requires a fair deal of adjustments like the bltouch connector and it only has on Z stepper motor connector on the board.

      And i need to figure out how to do the firmware etc…

      • ffhein
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        11 year ago

        Have you compiled your own firmware? It can be a little bit tricky figuring out what you need to change, but it’s definitely doable if you have a little bit of experience with computers.

        Btw. I think Creality made 2 versions of Ender 5 with different Z leadscrews, so regardless of if you’re trying to use prebuilt firmware or compiling your own you might need to verify that the z-steps is set correctly for your hardware.

        • @CrowAirbrush@lemm.eeOP
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          11 year ago

          Not yet, i’m still working on getting it all back together as i need different connectors and some other hardware.

          I thought it would be an easy way to save roughly €100, but alas.

          I have a copy of my current settings, dimensions etc. So it should get me some safe variables to start it up once it’s time to test if everything is ok.