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Z Height Mathematical Computation  

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Ron S
(@ron-s)
New Member
Z Height Mathematical Computation

Is there a formula to figure what the theoretical perfect height of the Z axis should be based on the nozzle diameter?

What I think would be a better way of setting the height would be to figure what it should be, then only need to make small

live Z adjustments to tweak it. I am thinking a multiplier of say 0.8 might be close, but that does not take into consideration the flow rate of the material.

I am a retired Tool Maker so doing things by numbers is in my blood. 🙂

 

Posted : 22/01/2021 1:26 pm
Clemens M.
(@clemens-m)
Noble Member
RE: Z Height Mathematical Computation

Sorry not beeing able to give you the correct answer.

A very interesting question. A nice research topic. Which factors have to be considered, for being able to compute z height in regard of nozzle diameter:

Possible examples:
- filament material?
- surface you are printing on (surface tension)?
- nozzle temperature (extruder temperature)?

Which of these factors are really necessary to get an accurate computed z height ...

Lots of questions - but as you said: you are retired so you should have lot of time 😉

Best regards, Clemens

Mini, i3 MK2.5S, i3 MK4, CClone (Eigenbau)

Posted : 22/01/2021 1:44 pm
Ron S
(@ron-s)
New Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: Z Height Mathematical Computation

@clemens-m

My goal is to come up with a number that could be set using feeler gages then just tweak a few thousandth to dial it in.

The Live Z adjustment is nice, but very hard to see what is happening until the entire calibration cycle is finished. A calculated number

would also be a validation for the "eyeball" method.

Posted : 22/01/2021 2:10 pm
Hooch
(@hooch)
Trusted Member
RE: Z Height Mathematical Computation

Nozzle height depends on many things:

  • Nozzle shape,
  • First layer width,
  • Bed type (smooth, textured, etc)
  • Filament type
  • Nozzle temperature

You can't quantify the perfect height in number that will fit all of those.
You have to do it by eye. There is no other way.

Also Z calibration takes about 1-3 minutes for first time. And then you can correct it during print in few seconds.

You are trying to overcomplicate it.

This post was modified 3 years ago 2 times by Hooch
Posted : 26/01/2021 8:45 am
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