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Mega Kossel |
One year after building the Mega 2.0, some of the reused components started to wear out and cause issues, so this is an overview of what's been updated and replaced over the past couple of months, primarily the print-bed and its related wiring along with some worn out cables in a couple areas.
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Mini Kossel Power Switch after overload surge |
The first issue that came up was the original power switch overheated and partially melted due to an improperly matched circuit breaker from an old refit allowing sustained over-current during the heat-up cycle at the start of a print, I think that's what happened anyway. Fortunately the fix was very simple, one of these IEC Socket with Switch and Fuse Holder units and a 5A glass fuse from the local electronics store, and some wire from an inexpensive extension cord covered the electrical side. Mounting the new plug was mostly a matter of designing a custom bracket for it to sit in and bolting that to the underside of the frame, then connecting everything to the power supply and that issue was fixed.
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New power socket wired up and ready for mounting shell |
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Power Socket installed in printed housing for safety |
With the power input repaired, the second and more critical issue that came up was a mechanical failure of the original heat-bed power input cable where it was soldered to the Kapton heater disk. Re-soldering it worked temporarily but it broke a second time in the exact same spot and the second break ripped a hole in the copper layer of the circuitry, so it was time to retire the old thing and get a more solid MK3 bed variant to do the job.
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New heat-bed stack components, from left to right: spare aluminum, cotton insulation, 300mm MK3 bed, and Creality magnet kit |
Parts used in the new bed are basically the larger versions of the ones installed on the Sculptor and Ender 3. A 300mm MK3 aluminum bed is the electrical and structural core, with a sheet of cotton insulation to protect the electronics bay taped on the back. Upper surface is coated with the magnet sheet out of a Creality magnetic bed kit to mount the existing spring-steel sheet bed surface. I'm not using the Creality upper surface since they have a tendency to crack and breakdown after a fairly short usage lifetime.
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New bed supports installed on Mega |
Of course, the change in bed shape means that a new set of bed supports are needed, some quick CAD work with the design files had the relevant parts drawn out and sent off to the Ender 3 and Sculptor for fabrication. Once that was done and bolted down, it was time to solder the electrical cables onto the new bed since it didn't come with the wires pre-installed, so here's some soldering in low-temperatures 101.
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MK3 bed positioned on Ender 3 print surface for easy soldering. |
It was freezing cold out when this refit was done, workshop was just under 5°C average temperature, so the solder wasn't heating up correctly on the workbench or iron. Seems that solder needs about 20°C to work correctly, so I flipped the bed I was working on upside-down on my Ender 3's build-plate after cranking it up to 60°C. This managed to transmit enough heat into the parts being worked on to get things flowing correctly and it was fairly simple to finish installing after that.