November 22, 2022
Description
I made a version 2 of this thing for spools that may need a little more width. Here's the page for USRv2:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3341611
Note if your spools fit, the tapered rollers on the original version can deliver lower friction.
Tired of adjusting your roller to fit different spool widths? Tired of spools jumping off your roller in the middle of a print? Is your current roller too big to fit in your dry box?
Solve these problems and more, with the one size fits all derail proof...
Ultimate Spool Roller!
To complete it, you will need:
The desiccant riser is convenient if you are using Rubbermaid 21 cup dry boxes. If you don't want the riser, use the standard plate for a base, or optionally bolt it to the top of your enclosure if that's how you roll... no pun intended (70x70mm bolt pattern). Here is a link to thePTFE bulkhead I am using on my drybox cartridges (shown in the photos):
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3223256
It works perfectly for my printer, which has a PTFE filament guide coming out of the heated enclosure. When I swap filaments, I plug the bulkhead with a scrap piece of PTFE, folded over with a zip-tie for easy handling, and sealed on the end with hotglue.
Enjoy, and Happy Printing!
Kevin
[Update: I modified my flat plate design to use as a desiccant riser. This will save a bunch of filament versus the originally linked desiccant riser thing shown in the photo (8.6m vs 15.6m of filament), and it's a more elegant design (IMHO). I also increased the axle radius, since I felt the fit was a bit loose with normal (non-printed) bearings.
Update2: I am almost done testing a version 2 of my roller. It will use even less filament and increase spool width capacity from 69mm to 79mm. The new design uses a slightly wider base since there was 2mm of width left to spare in the 21cup dry boxes. As such, all of the parts have changed slightly.]
Rafts:
No
Supports:
No
Resolution:
0.2-0.3mm
Infill:
30%
Filament:
whyDoesThingiverseForceMeToAddAfilamentBrand? any
Notes:
Cura says this printing all the parts will use up (not including printed bearings):
* 29.6m length of 1.75mm filament with the flat plate baseor
To minimize sanding required to remove "speed bump" artifacts on your roller drums, set your slicer to "randomize z-seams" on the rollers.
Optional: Sand roller drums smooth
Post processing is optional. Most printers leave humps on round surfaces, called "z-seams". These are usually hard to eliminate completely with just tuning. If the z-seams all line up along a single line, this can result in a "speed bump" for the spool to roll over (look carefully at the first photo and you'll see my unsanded speed bump). You can tell your slicer to "randomize z-seams" to minimize this. Either way, there will be z-seam bumps on the roller drum that you may want to sand smooth.
Freecad, with a heaping scoop of this and that.
License:
Creative Commons — Attribution — Noncommercial — Share Alike
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