I see how that works now, thanks. And you hacked together your own "slip ring" - niceKnas wrote:The tape then simply goes against a piece of steel wool - just like a brushed motor - making contact with another assembly at any rotation
Can I ask you one more favor? Could you post two pictures of the Juki nozzle (connector side) - one with nozzle pushed in (spring compressed) and one in "normal" state? I am curious how these babies work.
Sure, I could - but the point is that triggering the original LitePlacer switch needs to much force IMHO - so I think Karl got a nice solution here.Spikee wrote:when you fully compress the spring than there should be enough pressure to trigger the switch.
By reading in OpenPNP group I also found out that Juki Nozzle has another advantage: The Nozzles are held in place (and sealed) by a ball bearing mechanism - similar to the pneumatic couplings you find on air compressors and air-powered tools.
Check out the post here:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic ... 73I8OIXxjo
I believe that is the same nozzle holder Karl has - it is also available from eBay but at a steeper price:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Customized-SMT- ... SwAYtWOGI0
The nozzle holder seems ideal to build an auto tool changer like Karl already has. Push down the holder onto some kind of U-shaped plate and nozzle will be released - mount new nozzle the other way round. If I understand correctly, Karl achieves this by sliding the holder onto a sloped / angled plastic:
https://vimeo.com/144454866
Great stuff - more reliable than magnetic in my opinion.
If William (from OpenPNP group) is not going to setup a group order, maybe we should do that ourselves or suggest Juha buys a bunch of nozzle holder and remarkets them - would make sense if demand was more than 5 holders.
I would probably attach that holder directly to a NEMA8 hollow shaft motor like this one:
http://www.robotdigg.com/product/43/Nem ... pper+Motor
Attach that motor to the Z-makerslide and you will have a very precise nozzle - potentially elimnating the need to calibrate machine for "needle wobble", enabling auto tool change and reducing push-down force and stress on components.
In turn, I would also need to find a solution for the limit switch, probably along the lines of Karl's contact or using some sort of optical, capacitive or inductive coupling.
Just to be clear: I see that setup as an alternative to the original LitePlacer head. I know it costs more but it also has benefits. So maybe it should come as an option for LitePlacer 2.0