Sooo… what’s going on with you?

Today:

  • I’ve got a meeting out in Monterey today at 10:00AM and then I have to swing by San Jose back to the office.  Just the driving alone will end up eating most of my day.  I’m hoping to be able to get back to the office by 4-5:00PM.
  • Day 2 of my diet.  My diet basically consists of not eating like a pig and monitoring what I eat using FitDay.com.  It’s basically a free online food diary where you enter the food you’ve eaten and your weight and it tallies the calories, fat/protein/carbs, and gives you all kinds of nifty graphs.  Finding the food can sometimes be an adventure, but overall it’s quite easy.  I first used the site about six or so years ago and every time I’ve stuck with it longer than about two weeks, it’s helped me lose weight.  The problem for me is that right up until the one or two week mark I’m always hungry.  :)
  • Eating a big bowl of oatmeal with raisins and honey right now.  I’ll grab some coffee on the way down to Monterey.  I’ve got a bunch of music burned to an MP3 disc for the trip and will probably end up listening to NPR most of the way.

Okay, go go go!

Makers by Cory Doctorow

I just started reading Makers by Cory Doctorow and I’m really impressed.  He’s managed to capture the giddiness of the dot-com era in a very plausible-near-future sort of way.  I’m reading the HTML version on my ‘Droid right now, but reading the first few chapters has convinced me to go old skool and pick up a meatspace copy.

Hey Doctorow! Your evil plan of reverse psychology has worked! By handing me a free digital copy I’m convinced to buy an analog copy of your work!

As a sidenote, by making his work open source there’s all sorts of amazing things sprouting out of it – the entire novel printed on a cash register roll?  And other wild stuff you and I never thought of…

Remounted extruder controller board

Tony’s recent comment to my post about my alternate extruder controller board mount really deserves its own post.  Tony’s comment was:

That’s a pretty logical place for it. Other than needing some more wiring, I wonder why they didn’t design it that way? I wonder if it might introduce some EMI noise?

I’m about 95% sure I know why they designed the extruder mount on the extruder itself rather than the side of the ‘bot.  As designed the entire extruder is completely modular.  You could swap in a brand new extruder assembly in about 30 seconds (four bolts, one ethernet cable).  Heck, if you had a second Z stage and extruder you could probably swap in a new extruder in 15 seconds (one ethernet cable, swap Z stage).  They’ve said from the beginning they wanted their system to be totally modular and hackable – and that it is.

I haven’t noticed any symptoms of EMI noise on my prints.  In fact, I’m getting some really great prints with my current Skienforge settings.  I have a little blobbing and stringing – but I suspect that could be fixed with some attention to oozebane etc.

There are a few really great things about my setup:

  1. More modularity. A totally new extruder (let’s say dedicated to PLA or a different color ABS) would not require a second extruder board.  This means with a printstruder and printed dinos (I’m still refining those designs) you could have a totally modular extruder for about $65 worth of hardware rather than $175 ($125 plastruder kit + $50 extruder controller board).
  2. Visibility. I can easily see what’s going inside the extruder and whether the idler wheel is moving – without lines on the idler wheel.
  3. Less work. It’s one less thing to take off the extruder when I need to do any kind of work on the extruder.  It’s not much time, but it is still a benefit.
  4. Ergonomics. My ‘bot is sitting on a surface about 5 feet off the ground.  Having the motherboard rotated 90 degrees counter clockwise allows me to front-load the SD card.  This is easier for me because of the surface height, but I also had to do it because otherwise the side mounted extruder board would have blocked the SD card slot.  Frankly, I would rotate the motherboard even if the extruder isn’t side-mounted.
  5. Centrality. This keeps all of the electronics all in one spot and makes inter-board cabling slightly easier. 1
  6. Less movement. I doubt moving the extruder board around on the Z stage would ever cause a problem – but it certainly won’t when it is side-mounted.

However, this setup isn’t perfect:

  1. Less modularity. One could argue that having the extruder board side-mounted decreases the modularity of the system.
    1. Counterpoint: That said, if you already have an entire second extruder complete with extruder board, there’s nothing stopping you from swapping it in as easily.
  2. More wires. I now have six wires2 running to the extruder board.  Disconnecting/reconnecting six wires is more work than disconnecting/reconnecting one ethernet cable.
    1. Counterpoint: In just about any circumstance where you are disassembling your extruder you’re going to need to disconnect those six wires anyhow.
    2. Counterpoint: I picked up a six pin male/female connecter set the other day.  Once I clip the wires I can again have a plug-n-play extruder without needing to fiddle with screw based connectors or with the extruder board in the way.
  3. More maintenance. Those same six wires need to be maintained/wrangled instead of one ethernet cable.
    1. Counterpoint: As you can see from the pictures I’m using the little blue twist-ties that came with the ethernet cables to essentially bundle the wires together.  I just wind the twist tie around the bundle and compress it to form a tight coil.  Works really well with several of these placed at intervals.  Clean and still flexible.
  4. Shielding. There is less shielding on the six thing wires versus one large ethernet cable.
    1. Counterpoint: This has not been an issue for me.
  5. EMI noise. I’ve never had problems which I would attribute to EMI noise from wiring, but I suppose it is possible.
  6. More work. It is slightly more work to put the extra holes in the side of the bot to allow the motherboard to be mounted 90 degrees counter-clockwise and mount the extruder board on the side.
    1. Counterpoint: Perhaps 5 minutes of work total?
  7. Z stage blockage. My extruder board is attached by only three bolts because one of them interfered with the Z stage.
    1. Counterpoint: This just isn’t that much of an issue, especially with the extruder board remaining stationary.

Overall, I find the benefits far outweigh any problems that side-mounting the extruder might cause.

  1. But, as you can see from the prior post, not much neater. []
  2. Two each for the thermistor, nichrome, and extruder motor. []

Vouyerism

One of the interesting things about following along on other people’s MakerBot/RepRap/RepStrap blogs is seeing their workshop/work areas.  Some people have super organized, labeled boxes, and a clean clear uncluttered work space.  Others… are more like me.

  • Photos: I take photos of parts sitting on a sheet of white A4 paper that is being propped up against something.  With a light source it makes for a very clean photo.
  • Working on small parts: I have a long shallow wooden box – about 4′ x 8″ x 2″.  It’s small enough I can put it on nearly any surface, or even the floor.  It’s long enough to give me plenty of work space.  It’s shallow enough that it’s as easy as working on a regular surface – but has the short walls that prevent small pieces from rolling or falling away.
  • Working on large parts/Storage: I own a VERY large library card catalog (it’s a long story).  It’s about 6′ long, with 60 drawers on the front and another 60 on the back.  It stands about 4.5 feet tall and is about 3.5 feet deep.  It’s basically perfect for storing an enormous amount of small parts of … whatever.  I’m only using about three of the drawers so far for MakerBot parts.  It also serves as my large work surface.

Christmas robot shopping

I went to the hardware store after work today to pick up the items on my shopping list.  Walking to their register I fell victim to their bargain basement aisle.  In the process I dropped the $3 superglue I had found and picked up four times as much for $2.  Sure, its a no-name house brand…  but as long as its reasonably sticky there shouldn’t be any problems.

I also picked up some 3-in-1 oil for the various rods.  I installed the Z-axis rods without cleaning them properly (too enthusiastic to get building).  I also bought a large flexible magnet in sheet form (the kind used for fridge magnets – only in an 8.5″ x 11″ size), work gloves, and another utility knife.