It's always such a wonderful moment when a channel I've been following for ages suddenly puts out a video about or at least mentioning the software I created and have been maintaining for almost eight years now 🤩 Thank you for all that you do, and I'm glad to hear that my work on OctoPrint has been able to help you!
It's really enjoyable that you point out some of the miscalculations and errors in projects. It's really comical and helps the rest of us learn from it.
@@calvingreene90 only if you have the wrong size screwdriver or no screwdriver at all lol. at least you can remove a flathead screw with half of the tools in a shop
i am always amazed at your skill and ability to problem solve. Here in America kids your age are eating tide pods, and crying cause someone hurt their feelings. I always look forward to seeing what you have done. Great job young man.
Marius, a straight 5v is not enough for a Rpi 3B which requires at least 5.1v to be normally powered. (you should see the underpower icon on the Octoprint's page) Personnally I set my PSU at 5.3v which is perfect for the Rpi power regulator. It's also not recommended to power the Rpi through the GPIO but to solder wires on the PP1(+) and PP3(-) under the Rpi. This way you keep on using the power regulation and power protection of the Rpi. This is probably wise with a chinese downstep module as power supply, by the way. ;) You should also make a custom USB cable with the bypass of the 5v wires. This way, the Rpi will not power the Prusa's rambo board by the USB cable. It's the good way to do it.
Great video! Always enjoy these shop stuff ones. I got my first 3D printer a few weeks ago and never even used the SD slot. I went straight to Octoprint after doing some RUclips research, and never looked back. Also for what it's worth, I made the EXACT same setup with the step down buck converter for my printer to power a pi. I stepped the voltage down to 5.2 volts instead of 5.0 so that Octoprint wouldn't give me the power warning. For whatever reason, some Raspberry Pis need slightly over 5.0 volts or they throw a warning at the kernel level.
Although I'll never be capable of using this info I enjoy your problem solving solutions and explanations. Looking forward to projects using the upgrades.
I have a PC in my shop as well and strongly recommend passive cooling! That way dust ist kept out of the PC at all times. Even high performance PCs can be equipped with passive cooling.
mounting the fan at 8:55: The normaly middle "washer" part of the rubber should be between the fan and the case. ruclips.net/video/P-qSq9P_NLI/видео.html (but the printer is louder anyway...)
For the WiFi? I upgraded from an old Apple AirPort Extreme to a TP-Link Deco Mesh WiFi network. My garage PC is my workstation. The Airport was too slow (wirelessly) and I did not want to drill through the wall to send ethernet cord to garage PC. I plug the garage PC ethernet directly to the Deco mesh wifi and it tricks it to think it's hardwired. Bought another Deco for my brother's PC and we wired directly to it as well. Fast speeds all around the home.Hope it helps! Love the vids Marius! Keep on tinkering and improving your mods.
Does your PC have a decent filtered intake? Project idea: filtered cabinet for the PC, could mount it so it is off the floor as well. Also, for shop applications I think passively cooling smaller computers such as the Raspberry Pi (maybe even your old editing rig) would be a better way to go. No fans to pull in dust onto your components when possible is always a good idea in a work area where dust is a consideration :)
Thanks for the video. You are not right about the aluminum being colder than the surrounding air. It will have the same temperature, but it just feels cold when touching it because it has a much higher thermal conductivity than air and transfers your body heat away from your skin much quicker than air. You can confirm with a thermometer that the temperature of the aluminum and the air is the same. The temperature of all the different materials like aluminum, wood etc. in the room (unless connected to a heating or cooling source) is identical to the temperature of the surrounding air. When touching a piece of wood, it will feel warmer to your hand than a piece of aluminum, even though the temperature is the same. Wood just transfers the body heat away from your fingers slower than aluminum will. When running the router, the top of the wood plate will heat up quicker than the bottom from the router bit friction heating on the top. Because wood is a poor heat conductor the top will heat up quicker than the bottom as it takes time to transfer the heat through a poor thermal conductor like wood. But the aluminum will never be any colder than the air even though it feels much colder to your skin.
I hate to tell you this but if you used a Raspberry PI Zero it mounts to the back of the Prusa control board and it will connect through the terminal holes supplied using longer terminal pins. The Prusa site has the instructions for this addition.
I have also widened holes in a raspberry pi. Mine was a model 2b, though. I designed a breakout board for some hall sensors and had it printed and shipped to me, but it's holes were too large and since the pi cost less that half as much as the prototype board I figured it was better to try widening the holes first instead of sending off for new prototypes.
My son really wants a 3d printer... He wants to make some D&D figures. I started thinking about all of the shop stuff I could do and how much potential it has like dust collection adapters, holders and whatever anyone can dream of. 🤔 I wonder if this is a tool that will become an everyday household item in most homes in the future like TVs and microwaves.
Great "catch-up" video. Looking forward to the CNC dust collection project as that's on my plate as well, although ours is a considerably bigger and different CNC: CNC Factory Viper XP (5'x10', 10HP air-cooled spindle, vacuum hold down and 10-position ATC). Beyond the form factor, other complications for my project include automated tool changing, safety signaling and pneumatic dust boot control.
TP link...same as mine...just upgraded, as the old ones I had were lacking the latest security. Just for info, I found that you can connect different manufacturers units if they won’t communicate by a short Ethernet cable (if they are next to each other like yours), and they will work...like your printer setup...very nice...if only I had the time...
I would have used a switch to provide additional Ethernet ports from the power line adapter. However what you did works without having to buy new hardware.
@Marius Hornberger - at 11:24 you say you found the X carriage stepper cable guide on Thingiverse, but it not linked in the description or on your Thingiverse page. Surely your camera arm is a remix of it? Only polite to include links to "parent" objects like this.
My 3D printer (cheap Weistek 150) has a "build-in" misalignment that I can't fix mechanical so I created a C# program that corrects all coordinates for the misalignment. The same program also adjust all feed rates and temperature. As usual you managed to make an informative, interesting and fun video.
At 25:00 you mentioned there are some bed leveling plugins that you use, which ones do you use to check bed leveling? And at 25:30 you mentioned there is a plugin that tells you how much to rotate each screw, which plugin is that?
Friendly tip: Those DC-DC converters are normally rated for 1A, which for a RPi 3 B isnt really enough power. I had issues with mine so I got one that does 2.5A and now it works perfectly! I run Octoprint on my AM8 printer and its so much fun watching it via the webcam even though the printer is in the same room as I am :P
I love these videos. I love that we get to see more of the process/iterations of the parts. Thank you for the awesome videos. Keep up the good work :).
13:46. And I move this cable up here. Oh no it's too short. Well, I've been saying the same thing for years. Good to know I'm not the only one with shorter cables
Easy answer. When he goes into basement, he changes the temperature, with heater or by just being there. But the cnc has metal parts and can be considered a solid chunk of metal which reaches the equilibrium slower than the wood, so it can happen the way he explained.
I really need to get Octoprint set up. When I 1st tried it in 2017 it failed with an error I couldn't find any fixes for. Might have better luck now. I also need to install the bed level sensor I bought 6 months ago lol.
I found the Pi camera to give a very poor images compared to a cheap webcam, now I just use the webcam and it doesn’t seem to affect the Pi 3B in any way I could see. And it has a decent robust cable, that is long enough :-) And you don’t have to open the Pi to plug or unplug the cable. Now all we need is the CNC version of OctoPi.
I wouldn't hang the camera off the stepper like that, it'll put relatively huge twisting forces in the x-axis. Best to attach it to the frame at the bottom - yeah it won't move up with z travel, but honestly those kinds of timelapse aren't great anyway (they get old pretty quickly) best to pre-frame your shot, imho.
You will have problems with the dust in the PC. You should add filters to avoid the dust to enter the PC. It is crucial if you want to machine metal in you shop as the metal dust conducts electricity.
As far as the computer goes, I would think that the sawdust issue just from being in your shop would be a problem.. I'm sure you've done well with dust collection, but just seeing the dust inside your saw in your saw-slider vid would show a possible problem over time. It suggest you probably want some kind of filter on the intakes for the PC. As to the teensy screws, yeah, PCs have their own unique screw sizes, it's a very good idea to order a general-purpose boxed set to keep around for use with any computer needs. You can get something like 100-200 piece with 6-10 different screw types, including the mounting posts (e.g., if you're putting a new motherboard down in a new PC case), and a couple sizes of flush-mount screws as well as the different types typically used in railing and securing devices (like drives) to rails. A lot of systems have inventive connectors/rauls available, but they often still need to be screwed on somehow. Hilariously, many many years ago (OK, "decades"!), when PC magazine first appeared, they had a give-away for a subscription that was a handy little toolset. It was nice and really cute... Except that every single bit in it was too large for ANY PC screw. LMAO.
Great info, Marius~! I broke down and ordered my Prusa MK3S+ kit last weekend, so now I'm rewatching videos to pick up on 3D printing tips & techniques. Looks like I've got a 5-week wait until it arrives, so I've got some time to come up with an enclosure. I love the Octoprint and I'll be using my RPi 3B+ for it since it's been sitting on the shelf for a while. I'd love to hear any advice you might have for a 3D printing newb. Thanks~!!
Such a great video - I'm literally copying the whole thing - thanks so much!! One question - at 10;35 you connect the wires from the stepdown to the GPIO pins - how did you do that? It is not clear in the video and I would appreciate a steer here.
Does Octoprint communicate with the Prusa through the TX and RX pins on the J19 socket of the Einsay Rambo board of the Prusa? If so, is there anything special that needs to be done on the Prusa to make it communicate via those TX and RX pins? In the Prusa firmware, what class (e.g. Serial, MarlinSerial?) does it use to send and receive via those TX and RX pins on the J19 connector?
Nice video, how about building a track for your camera and maybe use a 4th axis motor to move the camera as its filming so it pans during the time lapse?
I'd also worry about stray wood dust filling the PC tower, even though you have such an effective collection system. Ethernet kludge adds an additional hop, but I guess that's no big deal. Latest Wifi seems to be much more capable. Power line systems can be problematical depending on home wiring.
Hi Marius, I love those rubber things you used to connect the fan, what do you call them and where did you get them please. I have a reasonable computer that I update when I can and the graphics card has five fans of its own without the fans to keep the core cool so I have a lot of fans I need to fit in my new computer cabinet. I like the idea of rubber mountings and that should also reduce vibration if I get any. I enjoy your videos and the things you make, I especially liked the life you built.
I bought a Felder 700s and I remember on one of your videos you were talking about your diamond blade. So I got the diamond blade also. $700 Canadian dollars but worth every penny. Cheers!!
Im surprised the two ethernet to powerline adapters don't interfere with each other. They may actually be compatible, in that they are using the same framing protocol, but are intentionally ignoring each other's frames. This suggests that while they aren't interefering, they might be sharing the same signal frequencies, thus reducing the effective throughput of (that segment of) your network. Regardless, if it's working for you, then it's perfectly fine.
Nice work Marius! If I may... the PC on the floor is going to eat a lot of dust... ,Is it not possible to move it to an adjoining room, with such cables to connect to keyboard and screen, and of course to the CNC? anyways... keep it up! Love your dedication and enthusiasm!
Marius, Really ingenious designs of the extra parts! Could you tell us and show us the reason you use the filament you use on the 3D printer? Seems strong but remains somewhat flexible. Maybe it get hard and brittle as it gets older? Thanks for another great and informative video!
Hi Marius, how many space are you now using in the cellar ? 80% ? I guess only the washing machine is left 🤪 nice Pril flowers on the wall I suggest to install some CAT7 cables during the next house renovation. I was lucky enough to have a support chute from top down to cellar (where my servers are). But I know in newer buildings with a chimney up from the cellar, there is often a gap between floor and chimney. That could make it easier to cross the Beton floors. While wifi still works in my cellar, the reliability and speed is much better with cable. I like you 3D print Upgrades and what parts you are making. Thinking to buy my own, but iI am afraid what type of SW toolchain I need to use AND to learn. What is your toolchain ?
Hi, I've been using octoprint for a couple of years now, however the app on your phone didn't look familiar to me. What was that? Also, were you using the standard timelapse, or the octolapse plugin to make the head look stationary? I tried the octolapse one, however it inserts stuff into the gcode, which made it fail quite a bit... Danke, schönen tag!
It's not recommended to run the pi from the printer PSU, as the PSU is barely enough for the printer itself. If you run into weird issues try powering the pi separately.
do you want to make a dust protector for your PC ? i guess it may be neccessary what with all the sawdust/off cuts floating around in the shop. i know you have a really good dust management system but i know you will never get all the dust, and sawdust inside a PC is not really a good idea.
Amazing what you see in the nackground of my videos :) I quite like it. It has enough power for basically everything and the plunge base is the best I have so far (but it also has a tiny amount of play in the guides). I especially like the fine adjustment that can be used when you already locked the depth setting. Perfect for setting the exact depth of a cut
I've been using Octoprint for as long as I've been 3D printing, so for me support/compatibility for it on printers are a must. Such awesome software! What are the dimensions/footprint of the 3D printer setup with white sides on? As in the thumbnail.
Du solltest dir lieber das Cold End vom Sebastian End kommen lassen, deutlich besseres System und du hast so auch noch zusätzlich eine Minimalmengenschmierung falls du mal Alu bearbeitest.
@@MariusHornberger Naja ich will mir hoffentlich bald eine Sorotec Compact Line zulegen und ich hatte da die Idee auch so ein Bett wie bei dir zu machen. Ich hatte da die Überlegung einfach Teichfolie unter das Werkstück zu packen wenn ich mit Minimalmengenschmierung arbeite, da weiß ich aber noch nicht ganz ob das ganze so gut funktioniert.
I rarely think you are wrong Marius. But why on earth would the aluminum table be colder than the surrounding air? And even if it was, wood doesn’t move with temperature. It moves with humidity. Most likely reason is that the piece of plywood is dryer than the equilibrium air humidity and air is mostly only reaching the top surface.
@Oliver Ford Octoprint is a Free Open Source Software. Its development is soley funded by donations. Because of this, publicity and awareness is very important. All the other things you mentioned are "normal" products from companies with a price tag.
Nice video as always. -@Prusa MK3S - buy the "Double-sided Textured PEI Powder-coated Spring Steel Sheet" - this was one further step making the printer absolutely perfect. - Overall I make the same experience with the printer like you and i am glad that i did buy the original - quality, support and innovation out of the box included. I know a lot of people that invested the same or more money in making their chinese printers "better":-)
you make it look too easy..hahaha thank god for editing right,great video and you made me look into cnc and 3d printing,i will start with 3d (cheaper) thanx and keep making the videos
When I move I also will dedicate my old PC to my workshop I think... DLAN adaptors are just a nightmare for ham radio operators because of EMI, lets hope you have none of these around :D Modifying your 3D printer... everyone knows that this will happen to EVERY printer sooner or later.
Hey Marius, great video as always! If you are using RaspberryPi 4, have you tried turning off the Bluetooth on it and then connect to where your WiFi signal is weaker? I had that issue with my brand new Raspberry Pi 4. Not sure if it is just my device, or is it a general issue.
It's always such a wonderful moment when a channel I've been following for ages suddenly puts out a video about or at least mentioning the software I created and have been maintaining for almost eight years now 🤩 Thank you for all that you do, and I'm glad to hear that my work on OctoPrint has been able to help you!
It's really enjoyable that you point out some of the miscalculations and errors in projects. It's really comical and helps the rest of us learn from it.
Slotted screws are the bane of all true mechanical designer and engineers!
Robertson screws forever, eh.
I threw out all slotted screws from my dads workshop xD Fuck those things!
They beat the hell out of Phillips head screws.
@@calvingreene90 Torx master race
@@calvingreene90 only if you have the wrong size screwdriver or no screwdriver at all lol. at least you can remove a flathead screw with half of the tools in a shop
i am always amazed at your skill and ability to problem solve. Here in America kids your age are eating tide pods, and crying cause someone hurt their feelings. I always look forward to seeing what you have done. Great job young man.
Marius, a straight 5v is not enough for a Rpi 3B which requires at least 5.1v to be normally powered. (you should see the underpower icon on the Octoprint's page) Personnally I set my PSU at 5.3v which is perfect for the Rpi power regulator. It's also not recommended to power the Rpi through the GPIO but to solder wires on the PP1(+) and PP3(-) under the Rpi. This way you keep on using the power regulation and power protection of the Rpi. This is probably wise with a chinese downstep module as power supply, by the way. ;) You should also make a custom USB cable with the bypass of the 5v wires. This way, the Rpi will not power the Prusa's rambo board by the USB cable. It's the good way to do it.
The magnetic chip baffle's is a great idea. No matter how powerful your extraction is a router cutter will always find a way to throw something out.
Great video! Always enjoy these shop stuff ones. I got my first 3D printer a few weeks ago and never even used the SD slot. I went straight to Octoprint after doing some RUclips research, and never looked back. Also for what it's worth, I made the EXACT same setup with the step down buck converter for my printer to power a pi. I stepped the voltage down to 5.2 volts instead of 5.0 so that Octoprint wouldn't give me the power warning. For whatever reason, some Raspberry Pis need slightly over 5.0 volts or they throw a warning at the kernel level.
Although I'll never be capable of using this info I enjoy your problem solving solutions and explanations. Looking forward to projects using the upgrades.
Marius is like a blend of Matthias Mandel and Thomas Sanladerer. Super interesting content!
I have a PC in my shop as well and strongly recommend passive cooling! That way dust ist kept out of the PC at all times. Even high performance PCs can be equipped with passive cooling.
mounting the fan at 8:55: The normaly middle "washer" part of the rubber should be between the fan and the case. ruclips.net/video/P-qSq9P_NLI/видео.html
(but the printer is louder anyway...)
Hmm okay. But the Noctua fan also has tiny rubber parts at the corners and these are now touching the case. But yeah, the printer is louder
Hey can you please upload the 3d model for the raspberry pi holder?
For the WiFi? I upgraded from an old Apple AirPort Extreme to a TP-Link Deco Mesh WiFi network. My garage PC is my workstation. The Airport was too slow (wirelessly) and I did not want to drill through the wall to send ethernet cord to garage PC. I plug the garage PC ethernet directly to the Deco mesh wifi and it tricks it to think it's hardwired. Bought another Deco for my brother's PC and we wired directly to it as well. Fast speeds all around the home.Hope it helps! Love the vids Marius! Keep on tinkering and improving your mods.
you could use loc-line for your camera arm then you can get any orientation you want instead of just in the xy-plane
Does your PC have a decent filtered intake? Project idea: filtered cabinet for the PC, could mount it so it is off the floor as well. Also, for shop applications I think passively cooling smaller computers such as the Raspberry Pi (maybe even your old editing rig) would be a better way to go. No fans to pull in dust onto your components when possible is always a good idea in a work area where dust is a consideration :)
Thanks for the video. You are not right about the aluminum being colder than the surrounding air. It will have the same temperature, but it just feels cold when touching it because it has a much higher thermal conductivity than air and transfers your body heat away from your skin much quicker than air. You can confirm with a thermometer that the temperature of the aluminum and the air is the same. The temperature of all the different materials like aluminum, wood etc. in the room (unless connected to a heating or cooling source) is identical to the temperature of the surrounding air. When touching a piece of wood, it will feel warmer to your hand than a piece of aluminum, even though the temperature is the same. Wood just transfers the body heat away from your fingers slower than aluminum will.
When running the router, the top of the wood plate will heat up quicker than the bottom from the router bit friction heating on the top. Because wood is a poor heat conductor the top will heat up quicker than the bottom as it takes time to transfer the heat through a poor thermal conductor like wood. But the aluminum will never be any colder than the air even though it feels much colder to your skin.
I hate to tell you this but if you used a Raspberry PI Zero it mounts to the back of the Prusa control board and it will connect through the terminal holes supplied using longer terminal pins. The Prusa site has the instructions for this addition.
I have also widened holes in a raspberry pi. Mine was a model 2b, though. I designed a breakout board for some hall sensors and had it printed and shipped to me, but it's holes were too large and since the pi cost less that half as much as the prototype board I figured it was better to try widening the holes first instead of sending off for new prototypes.
Great video, as always. Do you mind sharing links to the Pi case you printed and the stepdown converter and fan? Thanks!
Marius you are one of THE greatest. Thank you for what you share with us.
Great job Marius. I have printed the Camera arm and found it very effective. Thanks for sharing.
My son really wants a 3d printer... He wants to make some D&D figures. I started thinking about all of the shop stuff I could do and how much potential it has like dust collection adapters, holders and whatever anyone can dream of. 🤔 I wonder if this is a tool that will become an everyday household item in most homes in the future like TVs and microwaves.
Great "catch-up" video. Looking forward to the CNC dust collection project as that's on my plate as well, although ours is a considerably bigger and different CNC: CNC Factory Viper XP (5'x10', 10HP air-cooled spindle, vacuum hold down and 10-position ATC).
Beyond the form factor, other complications for my project include automated tool changing, safety signaling and pneumatic dust boot control.
TP link...same as mine...just upgraded, as the old ones I had were lacking the latest security. Just for info, I found that you can connect different manufacturers units if they won’t communicate by a short Ethernet cable (if they are next to each other like yours), and they will work...like your printer setup...very nice...if only I had the time...
I would have used a switch to provide additional Ethernet ports from the power line adapter. However what you did works without having to buy new hardware.
@Marius Hornberger - at 11:24 you say you found the X carriage stepper cable guide on Thingiverse, but it not linked in the description or on your Thingiverse page. Surely your camera arm is a remix of it? Only polite to include links to "parent" objects like this.
Hi Marius, where we can find the case for PI with enclosure for booster module ? Thank you in advance.
My 3D printer (cheap Weistek 150) has a "build-in" misalignment that I can't fix mechanical so I created a C# program that corrects all coordinates for the misalignment. The same program also adjust all feed rates and temperature.
As usual you managed to make an informative, interesting and fun video.
At 25:00 you mentioned there are some bed leveling plugins that you use, which ones do you use to check bed leveling? And at 25:30 you mentioned there is a plugin that tells you how much to rotate each screw, which plugin is that?
the first one is called "Bed Visualizer" and the second one for the screws is "Prusa Leveling guide"
Friendly tip: Those DC-DC converters are normally rated for 1A, which for a RPi 3 B isnt really enough power. I had issues with mine so I got one that does 2.5A and now it works perfectly! I run Octoprint on my AM8 printer and its so much fun watching it via the webcam even though the printer is in the same room as I am :P
Great update....looking forward to you starting to build furniture again though
I love these videos. I love that we get to see more of the process/iterations of the parts. Thank you for the awesome videos. Keep up the good work :).
13:46. And I move this cable up here. Oh no it's too short. Well, I've been saying the same thing for years. Good to know I'm not the only one with shorter cables
You could attach a (usb, or bigger 24v) led lamp to the camera arm and not to have to the bigger table lamp. But very interesting stuff as always.
Wait how would the aluminum table be colder than the air temperature?
It Isn't. A rare schoolboy error from Marius.
I now guess that the wood was bent from the beginning
Easy answer. When he goes into basement, he changes the temperature, with heater or by just being there. But the cnc has metal parts and can be considered a solid chunk of metal which reaches the equilibrium slower than the wood, so it can happen the way he explained.
I really need to get Octoprint set up. When I 1st tried it in 2017 it failed with an error I couldn't find any fixes for. Might have better luck now. I also need to install the bed level sensor I bought 6 months ago lol.
Now, add tiny servos to the joints of the camera arm and make sliding/eucentric time lapses 😉.
I found the Pi camera to give a very poor images compared to a cheap webcam, now I just use the webcam and it doesn’t seem to affect the Pi 3B in any way I could see. And it has a decent robust cable, that is long enough :-) And you don’t have to open the Pi to plug or unplug the cable. Now all we need is the CNC version of OctoPi.
I wouldn't hang the camera off the stepper like that, it'll put relatively huge twisting forces in the x-axis. Best to attach it to the frame at the bottom - yeah it won't move up with z travel, but honestly those kinds of timelapse aren't great anyway (they get old pretty quickly) best to pre-frame your shot, imho.
You will have problems with the dust in the PC. You should add filters to avoid the dust to enter the PC. It is crucial if you want to machine metal in you shop as the metal dust conducts electricity.
As far as the computer goes, I would think that the sawdust issue just from being in your shop would be a problem.. I'm sure you've done well with dust collection, but just seeing the dust inside your saw in your saw-slider vid would show a possible problem over time. It suggest you probably want some kind of filter on the intakes for the PC.
As to the teensy screws, yeah, PCs have their own unique screw sizes, it's a very good idea to order a general-purpose boxed set to keep around for use with any computer needs. You can get something like 100-200 piece with 6-10 different screw types, including the mounting posts (e.g., if you're putting a new motherboard down in a new PC case), and a couple sizes of flush-mount screws as well as the different types typically used in railing and securing devices (like drives) to rails. A lot of systems have inventive connectors/rauls available, but they often still need to be screwed on somehow.
Hilariously, many many years ago (OK, "decades"!), when PC magazine first appeared, they had a give-away for a subscription that was a handy little toolset. It was nice and really cute... Except that every single bit in it was too large for ANY PC screw. LMAO.
What do you think of the new prusa MK4, I have a 2.5s and a 3s, and thinking about getting at 4. Larry
Great info, Marius~! I broke down and ordered my Prusa MK3S+ kit last weekend, so now I'm rewatching videos to pick up on 3D printing tips & techniques. Looks like I've got a 5-week wait until it arrives, so I've got some time to come up with an enclosure. I love the Octoprint and I'll be using my RPi 3B+ for it since it's been sitting on the shelf for a while. I'd love to hear any advice you might have for a 3D printing newb. Thanks~!!
Such a great video - I'm literally copying the whole thing - thanks so much!! One question - at 10;35 you connect the wires from the stepdown to the GPIO pins - how did you do that? It is not clear in the video and I would appreciate a steer here.
Does Octoprint communicate with the Prusa through the TX and RX pins on the J19 socket of the Einsay Rambo board of the Prusa? If so, is there anything special that needs to be done on the Prusa to make it communicate via those TX and RX pins?
In the Prusa firmware, what class (e.g. Serial, MarlinSerial?) does it use to send and receive via those TX and RX pins on the J19 connector?
Nice video, how about building a track for your camera and maybe use a 4th axis motor to move the camera as its filming so it pans during the time lapse?
I'd also worry about stray wood dust filling the PC tower, even though you have such an effective collection system.
Ethernet kludge adds an additional hop, but I guess that's no big deal. Latest Wifi seems to be much more capable. Power line systems can be problematical depending on home wiring.
Hi Marius, I love those rubber things you used to connect the fan, what do you call them and where did you get them please. I have a reasonable computer that I update when I can and the graphics card has five fans of its own without the fans to keep the core cool so I have a lot of fans I need to fit in my new computer cabinet. I like the idea of rubber mountings and that should also reduce vibration if I get any. I enjoy your videos and the things you make, I especially liked the life you built.
I don't know. They were included with the fan
Thank you for your enginious designs i am impress thank you
Great video and glad to be seeing your great tinkering skills ! Keep it up.
I bought a Felder 700s and I remember on one of your videos you were talking about your diamond blade. So I got the diamond blade also. $700 Canadian dollars but worth every penny. Cheers!!
20:00 the vicious circle 🤣
Im surprised the two ethernet to powerline adapters don't interfere with each other. They may actually be compatible, in that they are using the same framing protocol, but are intentionally ignoring each other's frames. This suggests that while they aren't interefering, they might be sharing the same signal frequencies, thus reducing the effective throughput of (that segment of) your network.
Regardless, if it's working for you, then it's perfectly fine.
I honestly didn't expect it to work
it is wise to have a PC on the floor in a workshop with a lot of dust.
Looking good Marius...
Powering through GPIO without fuse is the best way to burn Raspberry Pi... You should solder wires to the board before fuse used. Or add other fuse.
Nice work Marius! If I may... the PC on the floor is going to eat a lot of dust... ,Is it not possible to move it to an adjoining room, with such cables to connect to keyboard and screen, and of course to the CNC? anyways... keep it up! Love your dedication and enthusiasm!
What slicer are you using on you Prusa?
Prusa Slicer
Marius, Really ingenious designs of the extra parts! Could you tell us and show us the reason you use the filament you use on the 3D printer? Seems strong but remains somewhat flexible. Maybe it get hard and brittle as it gets older? Thanks for another great and informative video!
It's just some cheap PLA. This construction doesn't need anything better
Hi Marius, how many space are you now using in the cellar ? 80% ? I guess only the washing machine is left 🤪 nice Pril flowers on the wall
I suggest to install some CAT7 cables during the next house renovation. I was lucky enough to have a support chute from top down to cellar (where my servers are). But I know in newer buildings with a chimney up from the cellar, there is often a gap between floor and chimney. That could make it easier to cross the Beton floors. While wifi still works in my cellar, the reliability and speed is much better with cable.
I like you 3D print Upgrades and what parts you are making. Thinking to buy my own, but iI am afraid what type of SW toolchain I need to use AND to learn. What is your toolchain ?
@10:00 Swiss Army Knife, great!
Nice video, thanks for the update.
Hi, the dust collection will have a height adjustment ? Also many thanks for the content you provide and inspiration.
Not only heigth adjustment. The height will be software controlled
@@MariusHornberger interesting, no more dust hood hair stucked on the clamps....!! XD
Mein MK3S kommt die Tage. Freue mich schon meinen Anet A8 endlich zu ersetzen😂
Great video. Nice improvements. Mahalo for sharing!🐒
Can you post the modified RPi case you used on Thingiverse? I have a Prusa MK3S+ and would like to use the same setup you showed.
It's linked in the video description
@@MariusHornberger The camera arm is linked but nothing for the RPi case...
Good job, nice machine!
Hi, I've been using octoprint for a couple of years now, however the app on your phone didn't look familiar to me. What was that? Also, were you using the standard timelapse, or the octolapse plugin to make the head look stationary? I tried the octolapse one, however it inserts stuff into the gcode, which made it fail quite a bit... Danke, schönen tag!
It's not recommended to run the pi from the printer PSU, as the PSU is barely enough for the printer itself. If you run into weird issues try powering the pi separately.
You are a credit to the history of German engineering.
do you want to make a dust protector for your PC ? i guess it may be neccessary what with all the sawdust/off cuts floating around in the shop.
i know you have a really good dust management system but i know you will never get all the dust, and sawdust inside a PC is not really a good idea.
Out of curiosity, what are those diodes for?
they'll be used as flyback diode for the coil of the solenoid valve.
I saw a Bosch MRP23EVS router in the background and I want to know you opinion about the router as I want to buy it too.
Amazing what you see in the nackground of my videos :)
I quite like it. It has enough power for basically everything and the plunge base is the best I have so far (but it also has a tiny amount of play in the guides). I especially like the fine adjustment that can be used when you already locked the depth setting. Perfect for setting the exact depth of a cut
Awesome upgrades - really neat! - btw I noticed an interesting Kill-a-watt like unit that your CNC router plugs into... what make is it?
Einmal Octoprint und man will nicht mehr zurück! :)
Wobei ich kleine Sachen mittlerweile tasächlich wieder schnell über eine SD-Karte drucke
ha! for a second I thought the raspberries finally come with big enough holes. I thing I drilled into every single one I ever used :D
I've been using Octoprint for as long as I've been 3D printing, so for me support/compatibility for it on printers are a must. Such awesome software!
What are the dimensions/footprint of the 3D printer setup with white sides on? As in the thumbnail.
About 50cm x 50cm x 50cm for the box. With the spools about 60 cm tall
I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.
Du solltest dir lieber das Cold End vom Sebastian End kommen lassen, deutlich besseres System und du hast so auch noch zusätzlich eine Minimalmengenschmierung falls du mal Alu bearbeitest.
Das ColdEnd passt gar nicht in meine Konstruktion und mit MDF Maschinenbett macht eine Schmierung keinen Sinn
@@MariusHornberger Naja ich will mir hoffentlich bald eine Sorotec Compact Line zulegen und ich hatte da die Idee auch so ein Bett wie bei dir zu machen. Ich hatte da die Überlegung einfach Teichfolie unter das Werkstück zu packen wenn ich mit Minimalmengenschmierung arbeite, da weiß ich aber noch nicht ganz ob das ganze so gut funktioniert.
Computers in the woodshop. We can call it Dust and Digits.
Keep pushing, let the engineer explode! Engineers do it better 😊🤟
Nice Victorinox (Midnite Manager?)
Can you make
A tutorial setting up octoprint and timelapse settings. Nice video man. Thumbs up
I've already put a link for setting up Octoprint in the description
I rarely think you are wrong Marius. But why on earth would the aluminum table be colder than the surrounding air?
And even if it was, wood doesn’t move with temperature. It moves with humidity.
Most likely reason is that the piece of plywood is dryer than the equilibrium air humidity and air is mostly only reaching the top surface.
The wood doesn't move, the aluminum does.
@@barrygerbracht5077 No? Not unless the temperature changes, which I doubt it does in his basement.
@@AndreasEkbom You answered your own question and then dismiss the obviousness of it... ok carry on.
I think good idea to work together with Simon " Denksport" from time to time. You could improove together to our benefit, would be great
you should have at least given Gina Häußge - the creator of Octoprint - a shoutout! Amazing piece of software!
@Oliver Ford Yeah, should've also given a shoutout to his parents and the builders of his basement, I guess.
@Oliver Ford Octoprint is a Free Open Source Software. Its development is soley funded by donations. Because of this, publicity and awareness is very important.
All the other things you mentioned are "normal" products from companies with a price tag.
Filament pls?
Great Video. Unfortunately your thingiverse link does not work.
oops, forgot to publish it. Now it should work
Nice video as always. -@Prusa MK3S - buy the "Double-sided Textured PEI Powder-coated Spring Steel Sheet" - this was one further step making the printer absolutely perfect. - Overall I make the same experience with the printer like you and i am glad that i did buy the original - quality, support and innovation out of the box included. I know a lot of people that invested the same or more money in making their chinese printers "better":-)
you make it look too easy..hahaha thank god for editing right,great video and you made me look into cnc and 3d printing,i will start with 3d (cheaper) thanx and keep making the videos
When I move I also will dedicate my old PC to my workshop I think...
DLAN adaptors are just a nightmare for ham radio operators because of EMI, lets hope you have none of these around :D
Modifying your 3D printer... everyone knows that this will happen to EVERY printer sooner or later.
Bitte weitere Videos.
Dare I look into the _comments_ section for snarks on the orientation of the Noctua-rubber-standoffs?
@Oliver Ford I hadn't seen your comment. I saw the standoff-orientation, and thought.. man the commenters are gonna give Marius grief about this ;)
Hey Marius, great video as always! If you are using RaspberryPi 4, have you tried turning off the Bluetooth on it and then connect to where your WiFi signal is weaker? I had that issue with my brand new Raspberry Pi 4. Not sure if it is just my device, or is it a general issue.
I use a RPi 3B
Are you saying it’ll play Crysis? Cool.
You are very smart and cute. Love your accent. 🐰🐰🐰🐇🐇🐇
Get a flux pen, it will turn you into a soldering pro.
I've always used solder with a flux core and it seems to work fine. A flux pen seems to help with surface mount components, when using a reflow oven.
I'd end up playing CSGO all day in the shop if I had that pc in it haha
👍👍👍
⭐️😊👍