Nearly half a year since first log about dumping the Z counterweight, maybe increasing stiffness, and further reducing cost, here's the goods: Instructable; CAD.
This Z axis has hit the same micron (±0.8μm) more than 200 times in a row over most of an hour of Z probes in a "Minamil" rig (this project). Practical repeatability appears to be within 25μm (0.001") after warm-up. In other words, it can resolve micron-scale dimensional creep as stepper heat spreads through a structure.
So how did that take half a year?
- June: #MRRFX and whY rethink Z
- July: Z v3: counterweight delete (& other wins)
- August: Z v3 -- counterweight delete -- progress
- September: ... still sorting Z axis repeatability ... (& Byproduct of debugging Z repeatability)
- October: Z v3 survives slow learning -- and a bonfire of time
- NovemberDecemberJanuary: writing the how-to very slowly
Someone at Instructables apparently liked the 'ible enough to send it straight to the home page:
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...and here too! You're everywhere. Great work 👏
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Mostly here, really. With some Instructables over there because I haven't made peace with the "Instructions" format here. :-/
Glad you like some of this stuff. Make one for yourself?
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