Klipper started throwing an error and shutting down while trying to heat the extruder. The extruder was cold, which basically meant a heater wire break. Thankfully it was very easy to find. So much for buying a nicer harness. Grumbles aside, I wonder if this wire got pinched when I assembled the chains, which lead to an early failure.

I didn’t have any spare PTFE wire on hand, so I spliced in a length of 16 gauge silicone wire and made sure to land the solder and heat shrink sections well away from any possible motion. I have replacement wire on order, but am tempted to run as is until it fails again…

  • vettnerk@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Disclaimer: I’m not a 3dprinter guy. I want to be, but I never found the time beyond a partially assembled prusa mendel i3.

    …however, I have done an extensive amount of wiring, in various environments, a lot of it on moving parts, and what I can say is that wires of these gauges don’t break like this just from movement along that cable chain (or whatever it’s called), unless it’s incredibly cold environment and/or incredibly cheap wiring.

    I’m thinking that you’re most likely correct in that it has been pinched.

    • IMALlama@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Agree. The rest of the wire is pristine and you can see plenty of red insulation on one of the open links. In a non-electrical context I would call that self machining and call the red marks on the chain a witness mark. The printer is fully enclosed most of the time with bed fans to help warm the chamber up, so it’s certainly not cold.