Theory about extrusion and clicking
So I have a theory and I would like to see if anyone else has seen a similar situation. After I built my MK3 it ran great for a few months. Then I ran into the clicking extruder problems and extrusion issues that many others have had. Suddenly one day, mid print, the psu completely died. When I installed its replacement I noticed that the printer ran amazingly again. Just like when it was brand new. No extrusion issues, no clicking, ect. In some forum somewhere somebody mentioned that this particular psu model has issues with US power. I now wonder if all of the problems I have had for the last few months were actually due to the psu dealing inconsistent power while it was failing, up until the point that it completely died?
Has anyone else noticed performance gains after replacing the psu?
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
Where I live now my line power is very stable at 120 to 120.5 volts 60.0 hertz and (knock wood) my PS has been fine since I built the printer Oct 4th.
Where I used to live it went from 103V to perhaps 111V on a good day and line frequency varied between 57.8 to 62.3 hertz. it was an island where power was generated locally via a WW2 surplus vintage Cooper Bessimer 2600 hp generator. To get computers to work there I had to use the island power to charge a bank of 40 old 12 volt car batteries and take that stable DC voltage and convert it to stable 120 volt AC this was back in the 1970s so not that long ago.
My point is not everyone even today has 120 volt power in the usa and I would bet that if the PS is ok at 120 it might not be at 112 volts.
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
My point is not everyone even today has 120 volt power in the usa and I would bet that if the PS is ok at 120 it might not be at 112 volts.
So if I follow what you are saying, do you think adding some form of power conditioner in line would be in order?
Also, do you think power issues could be the problem that is affecting a lot of people's extrusion?
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
it is worth thinking about.
Where I live now the power is fine (well ice storms in the winter might knock me out for a free days ) rock steady near 120 volts; but if a volt meter showed less that 109 during part of the day I would worry a bit about switching power supplies designed for 120/240 and I would look at replacing them with a larger meanwell
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
Long ago I worried about power quality in the area I lived and researched using a line conditioner over a high-quality UPS. At the time, my understanding is that most inexpensive UPSes only provided power but not line conditioning, so to protect against line fluctuations, a line conditioner was necessary. A quick google search indicates that the MK3 operates below 300W, so a small-ish line conditioner for under $100 could be used both for the printer and, given sufficient capacity, other equipment. This might be a better solution for anybody with multiple devices. Is there any reason a unit like the TrippLite 600W unit couldn't be used?
and miscellaneous other tech projects
He is intelligent, but not experienced. His pattern indicates two dimensional thinking. -- Spock in Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
I'm still coming to terms with the 1990s being a long time ago. You are not alone.
[...] this was back in the 1970s so not that long ago.
and miscellaneous other tech projects
He is intelligent, but not experienced. His pattern indicates two dimensional thinking. -- Spock in Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
Bob re the trip lite unit you linked this is the critical part. it looks like it will be fine if you are dealing with low voltages in the 110 range as thais within their 13.4% low voltage boost to get you back to 120 volts that makes the Prusa PS happy if you are in an area with brownouts s low as 85 Volts that 13.4% boost is not going to get you back very far
AUTOMATIC VOLTAGE REGULATION (AVR): Monitors incoming AC power and keeps equipment working through brownouts and prolonged overvoltage conditions. Corrects undervoltages as low as 85V and overvoltages up to 147V. Boosts input voltages below 102V by 13.4%. Reduces input voltages above 130V by 10.4%.
Re: Theory about extrusion and clicking
After I built my MK3 it ran great for a few months. Then I ran into the clicking extruder problems and extrusion issues that many others have had.
I am experiencing what I believe you experienced. Printer worked fine for a month or so, then stopped printing well one day (and the extruder started clicking every once in a while. I also noticed that my motors were very cool during almost all operation.
Would you be able to describe some of the issues you ran into?
Some of mine have been
I have tried replacing everything the filament touches after the hobbled pulley, including;
Thank you kindly