@dc42 said in Displaying the IP address using the N520 command: text R54 C0 T'IP ' value N530 W15 text T'. ' value N531 W15 text T'. ' value N532 W15 text T'. ' value N533 W15 David, The information did not make itself visible, the screen is not the more expensive LCD screen, it is the smaller LED one and I am now running the firmware 2.02. Download Koleksi Lengkap Dangdut Koplo Gery Mahesa,Dangdut koplo gery. Tags: Dangdut Koplo, Gery. Dangdut Karaoke Koplo palapa Duet Romantis Kharya Rhoma Irama.
![Donglot Donglot](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125378711/760510376.jpg)
@karim The A and S parameters control multiple probing. Probing is repeated until two consecutive probe attempts produce results that differ by no more than the S parameter; then the average of those two results is used. However, if the number of attempts specified by the A parameter is reached without getting two consecutive results within tolerance of each other, no further probe attempts are made and the average result of all the attempts is used. For instance, I use M558 A10 S0.005 with my BLTouch. You mean like the procedure described here?
I use a macro to automate the process, with no need for additional hardware.; Clear compensation map and Z probe trigger height; M291 P'Grid bed compensation map and Z Probe trigger height will be cleared. Ok or Cancel?' @tletourneau That's definitely some wobble there. Two lead screws like that will always have instability. You may want to look into a 3 lead screw arrangement.
Check the printer in my signature to see what I did to solve the issue on the Dbot. I could probably stand on my bed and it's not going anywhere. I think 2mm lead would be a good compromise. The 1mm lead is rather slow for movement and you end up having quite a bit of rotational momentum so slow acceleration and deceleration is needed. For normal printing it's irrelevant, but if you're going to be jogging the bed a lot then 2mm for sure. @dc42 said in Removal of support for 3-, 4- and 5-point G32 bed compensation: If you have a good Z probe, you can use it to check the bed level and tell you the levelling screw corrections needed. See Someday I'm going to fit a Z probe and try that out.
It takes just a few minutes to adjust the leveling screws manually using the shim gauge and the results are all I could ask for. The printer works great. Thanks for the reminder. I am checking on the screws.i checked the PSU both connected and disconnected from the Duet and it reads 13.4 both ways.I don't have a switch between the Duet and PSU and the cables are a continuous piece of 10awg cable with the crimp connectors on both ends.I will check the resistance now and get back to you I will also check the solder joints on the terminal block.I don't think it is a wire issue because it was working fine and it wasn't moved at all and when the bed started to heat the Duet turned off and we have the current problem which kind of seems like a failure of some sort. @dc42 I'm an unsophisticated hobbyist user and not focused on individual features, so much as general attributes: Stability. Usability - ABL using BLTouch, a good web GUI, good tools for monitoring printer status Configurability - I had to edit header files and rebuild kernels in the 90's, but that's a 1990's workflow - hopefully it shouldn't need to be done very often in 2019 Safety - not interested in a long running print turning into a potential fire hazard due to poor thermal design on the controller board, shabby component specifications, or poor error handling in the software cascading into a catastrophic hardware failure. Print speed and quality - I don't want processor speed and outdated algorithms to be the bottleneck in getting good prints at 100-150 mm/s print speeds.
Quiet - the Trinamic drivers seem to be the ticket.