The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

Category: Machine Shop

Mechanical widgetry

  • Plywood Coaster Warpage

    Plywood Coaster Warpage

    This is what happens to an uncoated plywood coaster with fairly deep laser engraving after about half a year of use:

    Warped plywood coaster - front
    Warped plywood coaster – front

    The poor thing went all potato chip:

    Warped plywood coaster - side
    Warped plywood coaster – side

    I swapped it for one with polyurethane sealant, much like those fancier coasters with the same layout, and we’ll see if it survives longer …

  • Snow Day

    Snow Day

    Today looks like a good day to fire up the snowblower and clear the driveway:

    Snow - 2025-01-26
    Snow – 2025-01-26

    One of the bolts holding the muffler on the engine worked its way past its rebuilt locking plate and will require attention before getting out there.

    Fortunately, it looks like a good day for shop projects …

  • Silica Gel Beads: Indicator vs. Water

    Silica Gel Beads: Indicator vs. Water

    Just to see what happened, I dumped a few of those beads:

    Silica gel beads - 36pctRH ambient
    Silica gel beads – 36pctRH ambient

    Into a few drops of water in a bottle cap:

    Indicating silica gel beads - saturated
    Indicating silica gel beads – saturated

    After a few days, it was obvious only the larger beads changed color and, no matter what the description said, they were not going to become any color I would recognize as green.

    While the larger ones did get darker, the smaller ones must have already been at their limit of adsorption and remained at the same shade.

    For humidity levels under about 20%, I think changing the desiccant every month or so is the only way to be sure.

  • Ortur YRC-1 Chuck: Tube Reinforcement

    Ortur YRC-1 Chuck: Tube Reinforcement

    Tuck a neatly laser-cut disk into a flimsy cardboard tube:

    Ortur YRC-1 - cardboard tube reinforcement
    Ortur YRC-1 – cardboard tube reinforcement

    Put a big conical center in the tailstock:

    Ortur Chuck Rotary conical center - front
    Ortur Chuck Rotary conical center – front

    Whereupon the tube remains nicely tubular on both ends and aligned along the chuck axis:

    Ortur YRC-1 - chucked cardboard tube
    Ortur YRC-1 – chucked cardboard tube

    Which is why you save all that scrap material …

    Yes, it’s the core from a toilet paper roll, which is way cheaper than burning through tumblers / mugs / shot glasses / whatever while figuring this stuff out.

  • Prusa MK4 Nozzle Tool Mod

    Prusa MK4 Nozzle Tool Mod

    Contemplating a 0.8 mm nozzle to print more-transparent things, I ran off an Official MK4 Nozzle Replacement Tool to stabilize the heater block while applying a wrench to the nozzle:

    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool - without inlet scoop
    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool – without inlet scoop

    For obvious reasons, it doesn’t fit with the inlet scoop I installed as part of blinging the MK4:

    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool - inlet scoop installed
    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool – inlet scoop installed

    Removing the scoop is a matter of removing those two cap screws, which is no big deal, but a little flush-cutter action made that problem Go Away forever:

    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool - inlet scoop mod
    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool – inlet scoop mod

    Yeah, I should have modified the solid model. Maybe next time.

    A version of the tool fits extruders covered with an Official Prusa Silicone Sock thermal insulator, but they were out of stock when I was in the mood. My heater wears a knockoff sock:

    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool - silicone sock vs nozzle
    Prusa MK4 Nextruder Tool – silicone sock vs nozzle

    Unlike the Official Sock, there’s no way to get a wrench on the nozzle with that one installed, but removing the sock is no big deal.

    I apparently installed the nozzle / heater block slightly higher than specified, so the tool didn’t quite fit. Loosening those two thumbscrews and lowering the nozzle to fit the tool solved that problem. Fortunately, the automatic bed leveling routine corrects for nozzle height differences on the fly.

    The scoop is back on the fan, the sock once again surrounds the heater, and I can easily swap in the 0.8 mm nozzle when the time comes.

  • Olive Oil Bottle Cap Covers

    Olive Oil Bottle Cap Covers

    We buy olive oil in large bottles, then fill smaller bottles for easier handling. The caps on those bottles were never meant to last as long as we keep them and the thin, deeply drawn aluminum tends to crack after a while.

    So I conjured a cap cover from the vasty digital deep:

    Olive Oil Cap - solid model
    Olive Oil Cap – solid model

    Which looks exactly like you’d expect when printed in black PETG:

    Olive oil bottle cap - details
    Olive oil bottle cap – details

    You can see the raggedy edge of the original cap just inside the cover’s rim. A snippet of double-sided tape holds the cover in place, after de-oiling the cap with alcohol.

    Having gotten one to fit, I made enough for All The Bottles:

    Olive oil bottle cap - installed
    Olive oil bottle cap – installed

    Only two of those see regular service: one in use and another filled when the first is nearly empty. The remaining pair huddle in the back of the shelf against future need.

    The OpenSCAD source code produces those fancy knurls with BOSL2’s textured cyl() :

    // Shower soap dish
    // Ed Nisley - KE4ZNU
    // 2026-01-17
    
    include <BOSL2/std.scad>
    
    /* [Hidden] */
    
    HoleWindage = 0.2;
    Protrusion = 0.1;
    NumSides = 5*3*4;
    
    $fn=NumSides;
    
    ID = 0;
    OD = 1;
    LENGTH = 2;
    
    WallThick = 1.0;
    BaseThick = 2.0;
    
    CapOD = 36.0;
    
    CoverOA = [CapOD,CapOD + 2*WallThick,20.0 + BaseThick];
    
    //----------
    // Build it
    
      render()
        difference() {
          cyl(BaseThick,d=CoverOA[OD],chamfer1=1.0,anchor=BOTTOM) position(TOP)
            cyl(CoverOA[LENGTH] - BaseThick,d=CoverOA[OD],
                texture="trunc_pyramids",tex_size=[2,6], style="convex",
                anchor=BOTTOM);
          up(BaseThick)
            cyl(CoverOA[LENGTH],d=CoverOA[ID],anchor=BOTTOM);
        }
    
    
    
  • OMTech Laser Cutter vs. Ortur YRC-1 Rotary: Job Checklist

    OMTech Laser Cutter vs. Ortur YRC-1 Rotary: Job Checklist

    The process of switching the laser cutter from “normal” operation to the Ortur YRC-1 rotary and back again requires a checklist:

    Ortur YRC-1 Setup Checklist - installed
    Ortur YRC-1 Setup Checklist – installed

    Which looks like this:

    Ortur YRC-1 Setup Checklist
    Ortur YRC-1 Setup Checklist

    The same thing as a PDF will be more printable or readable.

    Previous posts cover what goes into making it work:

    Notes:

    • Always disable the rotary’s stepper driver before connecting or disconnecting its cable.
    • The Ortur YRC-1 rotary has a pulley ratio of 1:3, so the step/rev value is three times the DIP switch setting on the stepper driver. For this setup, 1600 → 4800 step/rev.
    • The honeycomb frame is a parallelogram, not a rectangle. I align the cardboard baffle / fixture to the bottom edge of the frame and the rotary to the bottom edge of the fixture opening, but your machine will be different. The angular alignment may not be off by enough to matter, but consistency is a virtue.
    • The Rotary.lbset and Linear.lbset files live on a file server with daily backups. Such backups will come in handy when you inadvertently overwrite one of those files with the other one. Trust me on this.
    • The Rotary.lbset file does not have Rotary Mode enabled, because the KT332N does not home the Y axis in that mode. If your rotary lacks a home switch, then it doesn’t matter and you’re on your own.
    • The KT332N controller has a [Reset] button that allegedly does a power-on reset and reloads all the changed Machine Settings. This sometimes does not work as expected: power-cycling the controller is the only way to be sure.
    • The autofocus operation must hit the focus pad, which can be ensured by positioning the pen near the pad, jogging the platform a few millimeters under the pen, tweaking X and the gantry while peering down parallel to the pen, then doing the autofocus.
    • The focus pad has a crosshair clearing the chonky Ortur 3-step jaws, but I set the controller’s [Origin] at the foot of the pad’s base for more elbow room.
    • The Z axis distance field in LightBurn’s Move window does not accept formulas, so you must divide the workpiece diameter by two. Using a focus stick to verify the ensuing nozzle-to-workpiece distance is a Good Idea™.
    • The LightBurn Job Origin dot must be on the top row, because the KT332N does not go into regions with negative coordinates. With the chuck on the left and the [Origin] just to its right, the upper left dot locks the LightBurn selection to the physical limits.
    • Selecting [Use Selection Origin] puts the Job Origin at the upper left (per the dot) of whatever you’ve selected, not everything on the LightBurn workspace. [User Origin] then locks the selection to the [Origin] set on the controller.

    As the saying goes, it works for me …