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Is this normal?  

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ThunderCracker
(@thundercracker)
Miembro
Is this normal?

I just got done with building the kit and the calibration tests all passed. I have been able to print two of the sample keychains. When the printer begins to print it moves all the way to the front right corner and then hits the rails multiple times for about a minute and then it begins printing. The prints aren’t the greatest so I need to figure that out still.

Respondido : 29/10/2025 4:06 pm
Jürgen
(@jurgen-7)
Noble Member
RE: Is this normal?
Posted by: @thundercracker

I just got done with building the kit and the calibration tests all passed. I have been able to print two of the sample keychains. When the printer begins to print it moves all the way to the front right corner and then hits the rails multiple times for about a minute and then it begins printing. The prints aren’t the greatest so I need to figure that out still.

It is normal that the printer "bangs" the right and front sides a few times to find its precise home position. But it should not take that long. In a well-aligned printer, it hits front, front -- right, right -- front, right, front, right, front, right, front, right. 12 bangs total, takes a few seconds (but still sounds a bit unhealthy...)

If you printer needs much longer to establish its home position, be sure that your gantry is squared and the belt tensions are correct. Updated instructions are here: https://help.prusa3d.com/article/adjusting-belt-tension-core-one_845048.

The new Release Candidate firmware 6.4.0 makes belt tuning easier by implementing a wizard and a stroboscope tuner using the built-in white LEDs; no more strumming and acoustic frequency measurements needed. Despite not being officially released, it works ok on the Core One. But with a newly built printer, maybe you want to stick with the production firmware for now. 

Respondido : 29/10/2025 6:10 pm
Albert Lozano
(@albert-lozano)
Miembro
RE: Is this normal?

Thank you for your suggestions.
I finally managed to get it to perform a complete homing, but for that to happen the belts have to resonate at around 60 Hz, which seems very strange to me.

However, there’s something else that puzzles me: with the printer turned off, if I manually move the Y axis, the X axis moves the same distance. And if I move X, then Y moves as well.

Is that normal?

Please take a look at this linked video, and if it’s not normal, do you have any suggestions?

Respondido : 29/10/2025 10:30 pm
hyiger
(@hyiger)
Prominent Member
RE:

CoreXY printers don't move in a way you would expect. For example if you move the print head where X=Y (0,0) - (220,200) then only the 'X' belt will move 

From the Wikipedia Article CoreXY

For movement along the x-axis, both motors must rotate in the same direction. For movement along the y-axis, the motors must rotate in opposite directions. If only one motor rotates, the movement will be diagonal.

The movement can be mathematically described as follows. If A is the movement of the first motor and B the movement of the second motor, the movement in the x and y directions is given by:

Δx=1/2 * (ΔA+ΔB)

Δy=1/2 * (ΔA−ΔB)

Esta publicación ha sido modificada el hace 17 hours 2 veces por hyiger
"Some filaments feel the rain, others just get wet"

- Bob Marley

Respondido : 30/10/2025 2:48 am
Albert Lozano
(@albert-lozano)
Miembro
RE: Is this normal? (Solved!)

Thanks for your comments, which helped me understand the philosophy behind the Core One in my first venture into the CoreXY world after years of assembling and calibrating “regular Cartesian” printers.

I’ve now solved all the issues; it turns out that the method of tensioning by measuring vibration frequencies with a smartphone is highly inaccurate for Core One.

Fortunately, I downloaded the 6.4.0 Alpha firmware from GitHub, which includes a belt adjustment method by using stroboscopic light emitted by the LED bar; it allowed me to perfectly tune the belts in less than a minute.
Thanks again.

Esta publicación ha sido modificada el hace 8 hours 3 veces por Albert Lozano
Respondido : 30/10/2025 11:27 am
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hyiger
(@hyiger)
Prominent Member
RE: Is this normal?

 

Posted by: @albert-lozano

Thanks for your comments, which helped me understand the philosophy behind the Core One in my first venture into the CoreXY world after years of assembling and calibrating “regular Cartesian” printers.

I’ve now solved all the issues; it turns out that the method of tensioning by measuring vibration frequencies with a smartphone is highly inaccurate for Core One.

Fortunately, I downloaded the 6.4.0 Alpha firmware from GitHub, which includes a belt adjustment method by using stroboscopic light emitted by the LED bar; it allowed me to perfectly tune the belts in less than a minute.
Thanks again.

Try the 6.4.0-RC firmware, not the alpha. It still has a ton of bugs but I've been running it for 6 weeks now and it's good enough (for me). The audio belt tuning is accurate (probably because I have an iPhone and not Android) once you get a routine down for it. I've compared it to the strobe method and they both produce the same results. But yes, the strobe method is easier and more stable way to check the belts. 

"Some filaments feel the rain, others just get wet"

- Bob Marley

Respondido : 30/10/2025 4:01 pm
hyiger
(@hyiger)
Prominent Member
RE: Is this normal?

 

Posted by: @albert-lozano

Is that normal?

Please take a look at this linked video, and if it’s not normal, do you have any suggestions?

I just carefully looked at your video, and no, this is not normal. The two belts on the left should be moving in opposite directions. Since only one belt is moving, that is why the print head is moving diagonally (it shouldn't be moving in X when you move the gantry only). What that tells me is probably one the toothed pulleys connected to the motor shaft is installed the wrong way. 

Refer to this section: 42. Installing the X-axis pulley and confirm that the X and Y axis pulley's are installed the correct way. A common mistake is not installing the X-axis pulley in the correct orientation. There is a hexagonal cutout in the motor mounts where you can visually inspect the orientation. 

"Some filaments feel the rain, others just get wet"

- Bob Marley

Respondido : 30/10/2025 5:08 pm
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