
[img]http://i.imgur.com/gtIuhaQ.jpg[/img]
EDIT: 8 wires
Whoops wasn't thinking!geneb wrote:Ethernet cable has 8 wires.
g.
Front and back would be a tight fit with the belts. I have it running an extruder right now, but I do imagine you would need the shielded stuff for anything like endstops. As it turns out there are 8 wires per cable (Thanks gene!Xenocrates wrote:Indeed, you could get 36 per tower (Presuming front and back as well, which may take increasing the size of your idlers or something), totalling up to 108 wires. That should be enough for anyone. Even better, you can get fairly well shielded cat six cable, and ground it on both ends, not to mention those varieties of cat 6 which use an x-shaped spreader to separate the pairs and shield them against each other. It would be an appropriate cable to use if you don't care about looks at all (And you could also potentially get the gap filler for the front and back slots, so it doesn't look too terrible, so long as you bump the belt out a little)
Stranded Cat5 and 6 has been available from major suppliers pretty much from the day the product was created. Costs more than solid. Solid is fine for permanent installation in walls, so it's the more common bulk purchase.626Pilot wrote:I used to use Cat-6 for hot end wiring.
Don't do that. Cat-5 and Cat-6 wire are solid-core, which is bad for any motion application. It's likely to fail after a few months to a year. Took me awhile to figure out that one of the wires had broken inside the jacketing.
Real shame, too. Three pairs for hot end power and one for thermistor, with the little RJ45 connector, would be perfect for a hot end. If I ever find out someone's making stranded Cat-6, I might try it again.
Probably fine for extruders (fixed, not flying) and endstops.
626Pilot wrote:Don't do that. Cat-5 and Cat-6 wire are solid-core, which is bad for any motion application. It's likely to fail after a few months to a year. Took me awhile to figure out that one of the wires had broken inside the jacketing.