3D Printed DC Motor Laser Galvo
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- I am trying to figure out of Marlin has any galvo support for my metal printer project. I found a cheap supplier of f-theta lenses and mirrors. If I can wing it I am going to spend a few hundred bucks on setting one up. Then I will stick the entire thing in a vacuum chamber and cross my fingers. My end goal is a metal 3D printer kit for 3 or 4K.
You've created a raster output scanner...this is what laser printers have used for decades...there's a lot of complexity to get things "tight" enough for real imaging...but you are on the right track.
Your video production is getting better! I'm excited to see where you go.
And what about the focal lenght change? If you are using galvos the focal lenght will follow a curve. Professional systems are using special optics to compensate the change of the focal lenght.
pretty good, I hope you get it working, seems like a useful thing for the public in general to have
so glad i discovered your channel. very cool stuff
I always struggle to find what the actual max speed of the laser galvo in khz, will it Rotate mirror in khz or 16 Khz??
Can' t wait for you to improve on the ender ECM machine. You rock !
Planing to build one, soon, using a rotating mirror to make laser patterns.... I will use this video as a reference, but I will use double sided mirror and brush-less motor, and planning to use a closed-looped control by feeding the rpm measured to an Arduino( which also served as the controlling unit) to control a pwm, controlling the speed of the motor to arrive at a target rpm.... thanks for the vid ... so lets get rotating.
B DC motor isn't good choice because it's inertia and its brush contacts which can't move mirror at similar amplitude over time . You may countrect inertia but than Brush contact isn't Continuous and Smooth so it will create Unwanted Vibration .
This is awesome. My friend makes galvos for a living so i came here to see what the hell she is talking about when she says galvo. Very cool stuff ya got here. I dont know anything about lasers, but i build drones. You ever heard of bidirectional d shot? Its an accurate rpm filter that goes forward and back, not sure if you could apply it to any of your work but just throwing it out there.
You remind me of my 14year old self..(the mustach didn't really grow in till 16)
Ugggh... don't use your expensive soldering iron to make holes in plastic... use a cheapo, discarded one.
RUclips suggested me this video and I just liked and subscribed :-)
keep growing bro
keep up the good work buddy
hi you should use a photo diode a light dependent resistor is slow so for fast rpm it will give noisy or average data
Dude, you gotta do a follow up for this video/work.
I agree, cause i can get those results with just a dc motor and laser
This is what i was looking for . what if i can use the CDROM Tray motor?
Maybe. You could try it
Hi John; what exactly do you need a software controlled high voltage suppy for?
Keep up the good work ;)
Could you turn it into a resin 3d printer?
very nice
All the best bro...
I´m sorry to say that, but you build no "Galvo" (Galvanometer) at all.
A galvanometer is a coil hung up between two very strong magnets so it can rotate. Just like a DC motor, but only with one coil.
When there is DC voltage applied, it will turn to a specific angle. To drive this, a pretty complex driver circuit is needed.
photoresistor is quite slow, with a raise time in the 30 miliseconds range. diode is much better.
You need to use a photo DIODE. CDS photo resistors are terribly slow to react.
why not just use linear magnets?
Hi! use a photo-diode instead. Photoresistors are way too slow
I looked over at my time piece to discover it is indeed 4am. On the door. Synchronicity 😶
Is there a link to the .STL file?
I tried this with red laser...the sine wave stay is my eyes to five week...use speaker to move mirror
LDRs are the least useful sensors for time critical applications due to their extremely slow response. Turn at least to photodiodes or phototransistrors.
Cool!
Yeah, but it might not be as effective as the OEM Standard real Galvos in the industry lol😂..
But still that's quite a challenge you did right there 🙂...
Im trully recommend you to at least try to see the Compact-506 Galv series from Scannermax, Pango division for more advanced varience c:
Hey John, I'm trying to contact you, but can't access signal bc I don't have a smart phone. Is there another way to speak privately? I'm on matrix or you can email me.
Sure, what is you public email?
@@MorlockEngineering It's "info" at zurad dot engineering. I don't think my previous comment posted.
So, basically you built a laser scanner with a DC motor and a stepper, and there is no galvo involved whatsoever.
Galvo doesn't describe the complete system that directs your laser, galvo describes the way the mirrors.
While this is a very interesting project, I was rather disappointed that you don't actually make a galvo with a DC motor.
A galvo is an attenuator, rather than a motor. It is set in a specific position using a DC voltage. Same principle as how analogue meters work,
hence the name 'galvanometer'
Yes , i think Because Brush contact of B-Dc isn't smooth and continuous and rotor inertia working tougher make it impossible to countrect both but I think DC motor Are very Good to Modify into Galvo because the way its magnets are arranged " curved " you just have to put light rotor with Physical Angle Limiter and with wire contact instead of brusted one , curve magnet is useful because its field Distribution would be same in all Directions .
Oh shit, I should warn you, if you want to work with proper metal powders they use for this stuff, you NEED breathing protection. SLS is dangerous man...
WTF !!! ???