U-joint fail (Rostock MAX V1)
Posted: Sat Sep 12, 2015 8:20 pm
Hey everyone! I recently finished (long overdue) my Rostock MAX V1 that I bought during Black Friday 2013. I went through the initial head banging of getting everything ready to print and finally successfully printed some ABS parts (not sticking to the bed was a huge issue... but thanks to Aquanet, it's all good). After about 20 hours worth of printing, I started noticing layer shifting after about 4mm, and then after 2mm, it would clear back up and recenter. It was bizarre that it would come back into alignment... I checked each carriage, tightened them up, checked for flat spots... No problems there.
Then things started to get worse. Layers would shift, then shift again, and it had serious problems with making the infill meet the perimeter. Holes were not laying in the correct spot relative to perimeters. Parts were getting ripped off the bed (normally, I have to really pry to get them off the bed after they're done). I couldn't get things to print worth a damn. Dimensionally, parts were just way off.
At this point, I had already put an E3D V6 hot end with 0.25mm stainless nozzle on order (which is awesome by the way) as well as the Trick Laser CF arms on order. When they arrived, I disassembled the arms and the platform from the machine. Upon disassembly, I found that three of the metal u-joints had completely seized onto the metal rod. Frankly, I have no idea how this thing was even able to move. One on the X carriage, one on the Y carriage, and one on the platform. I had to physically hammer a socket into them to get them off the rod. I stuck the rods in a drill and ran them against a Scotchbrite pad which allowed the u-joints to slide back on. None of that mattered anyway since I had the new CF arms, but I just wanted to see if the rods had been scored too bad for them to move.
Point being... check your joints if you have the metal ones! I have no idea how mine seized up like that in such a short time. Admittedly, there was no lubricant on there, but I still can't believe it.
Then things started to get worse. Layers would shift, then shift again, and it had serious problems with making the infill meet the perimeter. Holes were not laying in the correct spot relative to perimeters. Parts were getting ripped off the bed (normally, I have to really pry to get them off the bed after they're done). I couldn't get things to print worth a damn. Dimensionally, parts were just way off.
At this point, I had already put an E3D V6 hot end with 0.25mm stainless nozzle on order (which is awesome by the way) as well as the Trick Laser CF arms on order. When they arrived, I disassembled the arms and the platform from the machine. Upon disassembly, I found that three of the metal u-joints had completely seized onto the metal rod. Frankly, I have no idea how this thing was even able to move. One on the X carriage, one on the Y carriage, and one on the platform. I had to physically hammer a socket into them to get them off the rod. I stuck the rods in a drill and ran them against a Scotchbrite pad which allowed the u-joints to slide back on. None of that mattered anyway since I had the new CF arms, but I just wanted to see if the rods had been scored too bad for them to move.
Point being... check your joints if you have the metal ones! I have no idea how mine seized up like that in such a short time. Admittedly, there was no lubricant on there, but I still can't believe it.