I've got to get a table before my rostock gets here. Like a kid waiting for Santa with this kit

Could you tell what the outer dimensions are for this thing? Didn't see it on the SeemeCNC specs page.
That's the holes I meant. So capton it is.mhackney wrote:I have a version 2 Onyx and there are no electrical traces out where the holes are so it is safe to mount directly.
As for the little holes and thermistor hole, I am thinking about using some capton tape over those. I have some very thin tape that I was experimenting with on an unrelated project, It should be just right.
I can get a 5/32" x 12" aluminum circle on Ebay for about $20. Do you think that it work just to place the aluminum over the heat bed without screwing it down?mhackney wrote:The outer perimeter was cut on my 12" metal bandsaw. I cut A LOT of metal so I'm pretty good at free handing! the cutout for the back was done on one of my milling machines by hand. It's pretty simple.
You are full of great ideas, I didn't think about the aluminum acting as a spacer so the glass fits the way it should. I'm ordering the aluminum circle. Thanks again for the great tip, I sure am glad that you are on this forum!mhackney wrote:@highcooley - Foil should work fine for spreading the heat. Do you have trouble with your Onyx warping or does your glass surface stay flat? I'm probably overkilling a bit!
@Eaglezsoar - that is just a scooch over 1/8" and should be fine. You will probably be able to drill and countersink holes in the edge to mount if you wanted.
If SeeMeCNC made the plate the size of the white circle you would sacrifice build surface with mounting clips. I guess most folks do hang them over the front. A better solution would be to cut a flat like I did on my original glass plate to clear the electronic area. If you do that with the aluminum plate, it acts as a spacer so a round glass plate will fit on top and cover over the electrical area. That's what I'll do.
Good job! Now I know it works. Seemecnc should add the aluminum circles to their items for sale.mhackney wrote:So I did put some little strips of thin capton tape over the several groups of little holes and the thermistor hole on the Onyx. I also had a scrape through where my nozzle gouged through the tape into the paint on the Onyx. The tape is thinner than the silkscreened writing.
All of my local hardware stores are closed for the holiday this evening so I didn't get the longer screws that I need. So, to do a quick test I eliminated the melamine snowflake spacer and just used little standoffs (I have some aluminum ones about the size of the plastic ones in the kit). I won't run like this since I think the Snowflake will help prevent bowing and provides some insulation.
Here's the cool part (actually, "hot" part!) the temperature across the entire build surface only varies by 5°D at 80°C! This is without a glass plate on top. I'll let it equilibrate for 15 minutes and check again. But, this definitely distributes the heat evenly! The aluminum plate all the way to the edge is hot!
Um, that doesn't make any sense.Polygonhell wrote:No they won't fit, just multiply all the numbers by 7/9 that should fit.
Any scale will retain the points in a circle which is what matters.
You just need to scale the numbers to fit multiplying by 7/9 means that the the 90mm radius of the original numbers becomes 70mm which should fit on the Phebe bed.geneb wrote:Um, that doesn't make any sense.Polygonhell wrote:No they won't fit, just multiply all the numbers by 7/9 that should fit.
Any scale will retain the points in a circle which is what matters.Multiply them by 7 divided by 9?
g.
Reason 1 for aluminium: The filament won't stick on the outer parts of the glass bed @ 40 °C. Reason two: The glass bed warps about 0.3 mm. While it was easy to adjust the convex warping by adjusting delta radius, there is a non concentric warping which isn't. I was able to adjust the following four points to +/- 0.03 mm:mhackney wrote:@highcooley - Foil should work fine for spreading the heat. Do you have trouble with your Onyx warping or does your glass surface stay flat? I'm probably overkilling a bit!
The "ths" bit was missing and rendered it senseless.mhackney wrote:Basically, he is suggesting scaling the values by seven ninths - 7/9ths. That will make the circle smaller and presumably small enough to fit on the smaller heated bed. Make sense?