Three spools of filament just arrived and needed a home; up to this point, I’ve been using the Lazy Susan Filament Spool for loose bundles atop the Thing-O-Matic. Until I use the last of the loose filament, which could take a while, I figured I could tack the spools to the floor joists.
It turns out 1-1/2 inch PVC drain pipe fits perfectly through the spool bore, so I squared up the ends of a chunk long enough to span the floor joists at a convenient distance from the printer. That steady rest doesn’t see a lot of use, but when I need it, I need it bad:

The endplate solid model looks about like you’d expect:

I could turn those things from two chunks of plate, but this is much neater; a 3D printer makes short work of custom-sized parts.
The two pegs of yellow filament keep the axle endplate from turning on the central screw (and, inevitably, unscrewing themselves); add glue in the blind holes and trim to fit with a flush-cutting nipper. The aluminum brackets come from a pile I’ve been using for years: as almost always, the holes were in exactly the right places.

With all that in hand, up it went:

I bent some coat hanger wire into a guide bar with three eyelets for the filaments, plus another chunk to hold the guide in position. Three small (color coordinated!) clamps prevent the unused filament from unwinding.
I’m not completely happy with this arrangement, because there’s not enough control over the filament energy: the coil around each spool wants to expand into a tangle exactly the size and shape of the Basement Laboratory and there’s not a lot preventing that. I think a variation on tbuser’s Spool Guard theme might be in order: let the filament expand within a tightly enclosed space around each spool.
The OpenSCAD source code:
// Filament spool shaft adapter
// Ed Nisley KE4ZNU July 2011
include </home/ed/Thing-O-Matic/lib/MCAD/units.scad>
Layout = "Show"; // Show or Build
//-- Extrusion parameters
ThreadThick = 0.33;
ThreadWT = 2.0;
ThreadWidth = ThreadThick * ThreadWT;
HoleWindage = 0.1; // enlarge hole dia by this amount
Protrusion = ThreadThick;
//-- End Plate dimensions
PlateOD = 51.0;
PlateThick = ThreadThick * ceil(3.0 / ThreadThick);
AxleID = 40.0;
AxleThick = ThreadThick * ceil(5.0 / ThreadThick);
HoleSpacing = 0.75 * inch;
StubDepth = ThreadThick * ceil(2.5 / ThreadThick);
StubDia = 3.0;
ScrewDepth = PlateThick + AxleThick;
PrintOffset = 0.8*PlateOD/2; // fraction of dia to offset objects for printing
Tap6_32 = 0.1065 * inch;
Clear6_32 = 0.1495 * inch;
Head6_32 = 0.270 * inch;
Head6_32Thick = 0.097 * inch;
Nut6_32Dia = 0.361 * inch; // across points
Nut6_32Thick = 0.114 * inch;
//----------------------
// Useful routines
module PolyCyl(Dia,Height,ForceSides=0) { // based on nophead's polyholes
Sides = (ForceSides != 0) ? ForceSides : (ceil(Dia) + 2);
FixDia = Dia / cos(180/Sides);
cylinder(r=(FixDia + HoleWindage)/2,
h=Height,
$fn=Sides);
}
PegSize = 1.0;
module ShowPegGrid(Size) {
for (x=[-5:5])
for (y=[-5:5])
translate([x*10,y*10,Size/2])
%cube(Size,center=true);
}
//----------------------
// Single endplate
module AxleEndPlate() {
difference() {
union() {
cylinder(r=PlateOD/2,h=PlateThick,$fa=10);
translate([0,0,PlateThick])
cylinder(r=AxleID/2,h=AxleThick,$fa=10);
}
translate([0,0,-Protrusion])
PolyCyl(Tap6_32,ScrewDepth + 2*Protrusion);
for(y=[-HoleSpacing,HoleSpacing])
translate([0,y,-Protrusion])
PolyCyl(StubDia,StubDepth + Protrusion);
}
}
//----------------------
// Lash it together
if (Layout == "Show")
ShowPegGrid(PegSize);
translate([-PrintOffset,-PrintOffset,0]) AxleEndPlate();
translate([PrintOffset,PrintOffset,0]) AxleEndPlate();
Comments
5 responses to “Thing-O-Matic: Overhead Filament Spool Holder”
Might not suit everyone, but having struggled through several iterations of spool holders, I found the cheap and nasty one works best.
https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/n3k3PqlYjIfQj00tJMJgG7K8mbVaML6-DWyj_pfvYXo?feat=directlink
Dang, something that makes my cardboard-and-hot-glue Lazy Susan gadget look downright elegant. [grin] I like it!
So the filament escapes around the edge and spirals into the extruder, with the twist working its way through the pinch wheels? I wondered how that would work… evidently pretty well. Do you have a guide tube that keeps the filament from kinking on the way around?
Perhaps folks need to see the elaborate base as well:
https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/22I3Yos4QY-CZ6O12XOeErK8mbVaML6-DWyj_pfvYXo?feat=directlink
The guide is the leftover part from the MakerBot spool holder.
There has been no problem with twist.
https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/OBeOV56ppFJJLFw8d-R9U7K8mbVaML6-DWyj_pfvYXo?feat=directlink
Duct tape FTW!
One end of your filament supply seems pretty firmly embedded at Einstein’s “simple as possible, but not one bit simpler” level: it works and that counts for almost everything.
Now, we must apply that approach to the sub-millimeter precision & accuracy required at the other end of the filament. It’s easy to do either a cheap-and-bad job or an expensive-and-great job, but nearly impossible to pull off an affordable-and-good-enough job. Plenty of room for innovation, methinks…