Slicing

From 3D printer from scratch
Revision as of 10:00, 3 June 2018 by Sensille (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Input ===== - STL - STEP Slicing output ============== - lines - arcs - b-splines Options: - approximate everything with lines (gcode) - approximate everything...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Input

=

- STL
- STEP

Slicing output

==
- lines
- arcs
- b-splines
 Options:
  - approximate everything with lines (gcode)
  - approximate everything with bezier splines

Adding velocity profile

===========
- trapezoidal
- s-curve
- higher order

Transform into target kinematics

====================
- cartesian
- corexy
- delta
- polar
 Options:
 - transform mathematically
 - quantize into oversampled steps before transformation and translate only points
   Oversampling may depend on the target kinematics and must be high enough that
   after transformation the resolution still exceeds the microstepping resolution
  

Generate per-axis motion data

=================
- either mathematically
- or step data

Transfer per-axis motion data

=================
- transfer mathematically
- transfer ((lossily) compressed) step data

Generate steps


Most complex solution: Transport mathematically correct data up to the fpga

- transformations for lines, arcs and splines needed into target kinematics
- projections into single axis and combination with velocity profiles for each
  transformatino needed
- fpga needs to know all projected profiles

Intermediate solution: Approximate at or after slicing and transport mathematically

- only one motion (lines or splines) need to be translated into all target kinematics
- fpga need to know one profile for each kinematics

Simplest solution: Approximate at or after slicing

- only points need to be translated to target kinematics
- computationally intensive because each point needs to be translated individually,
  plus needed oversampling for some kinematics
- steps need to be compressed for transmission. If the compression is lossy, it degrades
  the precision slightly