Kisssystems

Kisssystems

Amazon Prime

Amazon Prime

MultiTurnServoMod

MultiTurnServoMod

SquirrelDoor2

SquirrelDoor2

PrusaMk3DrySpool

PrusaMk3DrySpool

PendantAccel

PendantAccel

ShuttleMod

ShuttleMod

Openpnp Pick & PLace

Openpnp Pick & PLace

KaysMapleTurtle

KaysMapleTurtle

TennisShooter

TennisShooter

Nutty Squirrels

Nutty Squirrels

TryFusion360

TryFusion360

Part2AXI mount1

Part2AXI mount1

ww1

ww1

M4 quatos1

M4 quatos1

SonyEffio

SonyEffio

minumosd

minumosd

Hoverbike

Hoverbike

M4 FPV250rm

M4 FPV250rm

AutoquadGhost

AutoquadGhost

Ghost

Ghost

BedfordBoysRanch

BedfordBoysRanch

WalkeraInfraXframe

WalkeraInfraXframe

M4Flip

M4Flip

X8Autoquad

X8Autoquad

Vectron 3 engine spaceship

Vectron 3 engine spaceship

M4PhantomUpgrade

M4PhantomUpgrade

Produce 0

Produce 0

M4 micro to 670mm Quad

M4 micro to 670mm Quad

Пікірлер

  • @rjpeterson1
    @rjpeterson1Ай бұрын

    Very informative video. Sorry no feedback on your design, as I don’t have a PNP machine yet.

  • @fredcarruthers8285
    @fredcarruthers8285Ай бұрын

    I think you got ripped off. That is not a bird feeder that is a squirrel feeder.😂

  • @mikefulton1963
    @mikefulton19634 ай бұрын

    Doesn't look like any Amazon Prime delivery vehicle I've ever seen. You cannot see the license plate clearly, but it's likely someplace in Europe, given that it's a Mercedes commercial van. How would the narrator know the driver had just made 3 or 4 other deliveries immediately before his? I call BS on this video.

  • @Kisssystems
    @Kisssystems3 ай бұрын

    100 percent wrong

  • @mikefulton1963
    @mikefulton19633 ай бұрын

    @@Kisssystems Care to elaborate on that?

  • @Kisssystems
    @Kisssystems3 ай бұрын

    @@mikefulton1963 A simple search would see they have bought thousands of Mercedes trucks

  • @codegrey9944
    @codegrey99444 ай бұрын

    I'm sure Amazon pay their delivery drivers handsomely so they don't have to rush about to make ends meet. Good on the old whinger for calling him out.

  • @donalddday7741
    @donalddday77414 ай бұрын

    amazon drivers are people fired from swift

  • @np2850
    @np28504 ай бұрын

    Why even show video. Such disgruntled old man

  • @surearrow
    @surearrow4 ай бұрын

    >>-------------------> I was a driver for Amazon (actually for one of their thousands of delivery vendors like your person here. Amazon does not directly deliver packages themselves.) . Yes, there is no excuse for this. But please, place blame on Amazon the company and their 3rd party delivery vendors who force so much pressure on these drivers to deliver 275 to 350 packages per day - at just above minimum wage - and with no room to grow into better positions. This is why I quit after 3 months as so many do. This job has a high rotation rate of drivers, and Amazon vendors exploit this turn-over month after month with hiring new (unsuspecting) drivers who are nothing more than fresh meat to be drained empty, IMHO. When you see some drivers throw packages, you're seeing a person about ready to quit the monkey circus and free themselves from Amazon's tent. He (or she) is on their last days of putting up with the b.s. Sadly, the customers suffer sometimes when this happens. I guess this is the cost of "low" delivery pricing. PS. At sign up, the new driver is told from the vendor that there will only be about 50 to 120 packages per day. ROTFL!!!!

  • @svetozar161
    @svetozar1619 ай бұрын

    Hello. What kind of cameras for vision you used?

  • @iforce2d
    @iforce2d Жыл бұрын

    Very helpful, thanks!

  • @mrechbreger
    @mrechbreger Жыл бұрын

    I really wonder how you guys can handle the strips... I would not have the patience to peel them and orderly put them onto a table. that's just so much extra work.

  • @labamichnetvoll5911
    @labamichnetvoll5911 Жыл бұрын

    very nice to look at, thanks for all your information about your project:)

  • @spaceengineersmods
    @spaceengineersmods Жыл бұрын

    Great diy build, hopefully you make an Update Video about this Machine one Day, showing what you improved and if its working as you imagine

  • @gke3800
    @gke38002 жыл бұрын

    Very impressive. How are you doing solder paste?

  • @gke3800
    @gke38002 жыл бұрын

    Nice.

  • @usmanyaqoob6765
    @usmanyaqoob67652 жыл бұрын

    Hello. I am also working on this Can you share config file

  • @Nitnee27
    @Nitnee272 жыл бұрын

    Is the squirrel for dinner

  • @Nitnee27
    @Nitnee272 жыл бұрын

    Awww!! My sweet squirrel friend

  • @ChrisFredriksson
    @ChrisFredriksson2 жыл бұрын

    Which controller board is this machine using? Might be in the video, but KZread isn't playing the video, so I can't see it at the moment 😥

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54142 жыл бұрын

    SmoothieBoard

  • @hiberxen8527
    @hiberxen85272 жыл бұрын

    Good JOB. Admire you .... Become 73 This year?

  • @capthowdy126
    @capthowdy1263 жыл бұрын

    ive been looking for a solution for dealing with older rolls of filament thats taken on moisture over time an i love the idea of using the 5 gallon bucket, ive designed 2 or 3 different ones up in tinkercad an fusion360 but have backed out on printing them cause they will ended up using alot more filament than i feel like it would be worth. so ive been looking for a way to do it without going out an buying one of the sunlu filament dryers. i dont really have a stove that i can use to dry filament out in, familys not willing an im not pressing them on it so ive been keeping an eye out for a small over that i can use. i keep all my filament in rubbermaid tubs but they dont have seals on them so i keep each roll in a bag that i seal, i wish i had a way to vacuum seal them but i keep a bunch of the silicon beads packs in each bag along with the bottom of the tub full of packs of the silicon beads but im still not happy with that so im looking to add alittle heat but only to rolls thats been opened an are being printed and i want them to be able to feed into my printers. i have a large enclosure built that holds 6 of my printers so i can sit the tub ontop of the enclosure an just feed the filament into the enclosure using ptfe tubing an fittings then straight to the printer. my biggest issue right now is having space for all my printers an leaving me a place to work so im looking at stacking my printers on a shelf if i can do it while keep each printer accessible an easy to get to an maintain as needed. thats something ive not really seen shared alot is work spaces an 3d printer benches not really sure what to call it, u can find print farms but thats way more than id ever achieve so im trying to do everything in a diy fashion an as cheaply as possible by reusing old stuff, thats y i liked the bucket idea so much.

  • @pentachronic
    @pentachronic3 жыл бұрын

    Looks cool but you definitely need a more rigid base. That thing is bouncing around too much for accurate placement IMO.

  • @leealex6922
    @leealex69223 жыл бұрын

    I pay homage to your skills and envy the machine. I have TVM802A and it's a mess. I asked for a/s, but I'm not going to solve it physically and I'm going to end a/s with only software settings. Bad QIHE! Take a look at the video below: I ask if this determines that it is possible to repair the software by modifying the parameters without replacing the parts. kzread.info/dash/bejne/i45s1MOsiZuTfc4.html

  • @usmaan8420
    @usmaan84203 жыл бұрын

    Hi, Would you mind sharing the config file for your smoothieboard. Or providing a link to the website your got your BOM from. It would be greatly appreciated. Iv seen your cool machine and want to build my own.

  • @Subpilot1
    @Subpilot13 жыл бұрын

    Great work. I built my machine a couple years ago based on same platform but sadly didn't ever complete it. ~80% done. Maybe you inspired me to get back on it. It ended up costing much more than originally anticipated but I did splurge on Clear Path Servos, precision rails and an optical breadboard base plate. I made my brackets with printed CF Nylon and they have a bit too much flex. That was probably what got me hung up on the lack of desired repeatability and made me put it away. Was hoping to save on PCB assembly cost but ended up sunk cost for an interesting pile in the corner of my shop. Not a small project by any means and I appreciate the hours you put into it.

  • @leealex6922
    @leealex69223 жыл бұрын

    음성 입력 사진 입력 Hello The function of the tray feeder and nozzle changer is impressive. Is the stepper motor a nil type that can directly connect the air hose? I'd like to know the model name.

  • @mahdinazari3961
    @mahdinazari39613 жыл бұрын

    kiss x sis ????

  • @ninoblackjudas8284
    @ninoblackjudas82843 жыл бұрын

    I see you use Juki nozzles, what do you think about them? I'm making choice, if Juki 5xx or Samsung's CP40 (or other) nozzles...

  • @mrjackdavies95
    @mrjackdavies953 жыл бұрын

    Nice machine! Where did you get those green tape holders?

  • @Bottleworksnet
    @Bottleworksnet4 жыл бұрын

    It's looking great!

  • @PsychogenicTechnologies
    @PsychogenicTechnologies4 жыл бұрын

    Wow. I went the easy way (considering all the custom machined parts involved in yours) and went with a LitePlacer kit--a one stop shop for a simple PnP. But after seeing this one move, I gotta say I'm pretty tempted to upgrade. So smooth and fast! Depending on what you're producing, you may wind up finding the strip feeds a bit annoying (I sure have, and am looking at automated feeders, at least for the crazy popular stuff--looking at you 100n caps). I really like the hall sensors for homing, I've had the jitter you mention with the visual homing but you can see in my own videos that it gets the job done anyhow--even for 0402 parts without taking the time for bottom vision alignment. Only tips I might have are OpenPnP related: for short hops, the CTRL+click or moving that square in the cross-hairs is better than those base 10 motion. For longer ones and other stuff, I use a lot of scripting to get rid of repetitive tasks (I'll be releasing my most useful ones/posting a vid about that soon). Anyhow, nice machine, great work. Thanks for sharing.

  • @raghav1502
    @raghav15024 жыл бұрын

    dude u dont know how to design a PCB the fiducials must be on corners and not in between somewhere and ur camera is having an error, may be 0.2mm in x and Y so just fine tune that and you will have a good PNP machine

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    The board was designed a long time ago, I just edited it quickly to add fiducials as a test board. All the board manufacturers have extensive instruction on how to do it and I have read several so it's not not knowing. This is just a toy for me and allows my 72 year old hands to still assemble boards. Also I have never seen and error over .05 mm and most of the time its more like .03mm . Thanks for taking the time to comment.

  • @SRG216
    @SRG2164 жыл бұрын

    Nice project. I looked on thingiverse (www.thingiverse.com/thing:4545049) but didn't see the schematic or teensy code. I also watched your jog shuttle modification video (kzread.info/dash/bejne/gHVsm6eFe9SemdY.html) - nice work. Do you think it would be hard to build a jog shuttle from scratch and use a teensy mimic the USB signals used by the Tormach jog shuttle?

  • @bbcnc4756
    @bbcnc47564 жыл бұрын

    Nicely done ! Thanks for sharing.

  • @chandrashekharc1748
    @chandrashekharc17484 жыл бұрын

    Hi.. great to watch this video. How do you control stepper for X and Y axis..is it a closed loop system and controlled by smoothie?

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    Gcode from Openpnp is sent to the smoothie board stepper drivers to step the motors. It's open loop, if I was going to make a really fast machine I would use closed loop servo system but not worth the added expense.

  • @colormaker5070
    @colormaker50704 жыл бұрын

    very nice, I have a 440 and like your design.

  • @seanmcdonald656
    @seanmcdonald6564 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Will you be making any more videos on you PNP? Like the z axis or vacuum pump controls?

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    I hope to do a couple more when time permits. I'll try to cover those subjects in more detail. Thanks for viewing the video.

  • @powil4ss
    @powil4ss4 жыл бұрын

    Does your tool holder allows you to change tools for both heads? or only for the one on the right?

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    I have it set up with just the right nozzle changeable. Just be a matter of adding another holder. My thinking was to keep a low runout 503 holder in the left all the time.

  • @raghav1502
    @raghav15024 жыл бұрын

    that tool holder should have some sort of clips or magnets to keep tools in place he actually missed it

  • @wronex
    @wronex4 жыл бұрын

    It looks great! Nice to see a walk through like this :)

  • @TnInventor
    @TnInventor4 жыл бұрын

    nicely done :D

  • @randomname3894
    @randomname38944 жыл бұрын

    Nice build! I think the mechanical endstops are overkill, since the machine should have softlimits anyway. When i build my first CNC i was thinking itˋs extra save and build them in.. however if you configure softlimits, the switches will never be used unless you have a very rare error, that your motors are getting wrong signals. With softlimits the controller will not let code or you drive the system over it’s limits and in case of mach3/cnc software even warn you if a gcode is outside of the area before letting you start it. Since you’ve already have them in, it doesn’t matter, but you could get two more pins free on your controller for other things. I’m building a PNP too, but it’s a long time project - of course:) After spending a lot of time getting a closed-loop style Z leveling to work, I’m testing some 3D printed feeder designs. I think it would be great to have just a few auto feeders for the typical 10k‘s and 0,1uf‘s. I don’t think it’s really necessary to have feeders for everything.. the tape and vision system is not bad. Keep on!

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    Yes your right, I mentioned that you should never need them once the machine is set up.

  • @raghav1502
    @raghav15024 жыл бұрын

    he should have used optical instead of magnetic hall effect sensors for homing, ive made a machine (Open PNP) which is having optical homing and works great

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    @@raghav1502 I've used both many times.

  • @randomname3894
    @randomname38944 жыл бұрын

    @@raghav1502 there´s not such a big difference between mechanical vs optical.. i also used booth for machines. On my PNP i don´t have any limit switches at all. I use TMC Stallguard for Y&X plus visual homing after it. And closed loop position for the Z (my Z Stepper only rotates under 360 deg, so it always knows where it is without homing).

  • @ticso24
    @ticso244 жыл бұрын

    Well made machine. The reason to lower on the bottom camera is because tall parts have to be inspected with raised nozzle to have the bottom of the part at the same height and some machines, including mine, can only lower the nozzles, so it has to go down for flat parts.

  • @Kisssystems
    @Kisssystems4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, I never gave that a thought.

  • @jon_raymond
    @jon_raymond4 жыл бұрын

    Great walk through of your machine! Really enjoyable to watch. Thanks for sharing.

  • @IceTurf
    @IceTurf4 жыл бұрын

    12:00 - How did you make that vacuum reservoir canister? Did you drill out the valve from the top or ?

  • @Kisssystems
    @Kisssystems4 жыл бұрын

    I tapped the end down into the (empty) can and then drilled it out for a tight fit on a piece of tubing a couple of inches long. I plugged the tubing on both ends with wax so when I inserted it that the glue would not clog it up. Then with the can upside down I used a old syringe to inject about an ounce of epoxy up into the can and then quickly inserted the tubing half way in. I just let is set upside down so the epoxy would flow down around the tubing on the inside and make a seal. I drilled out the tubing after the epoxy dried.

  • @DominicClifton
    @DominicClifton4 жыл бұрын

    Do you have any details regarding the magnetic sensors/switches you use for the homing? Part numbers, links, datasheets, etc? Trying to make my CHMT48VB home better, thinking about making some adaptor to replace the microswitches it came with.

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/785-SS441A I took 5 volts off the smoothie board for power. The sensor output has about 50 ma available so I added a low current led to light when sensor is tripped. Used a refrigerator magnet to trigger it. I believe I had to reverse the input logic to the smoothie board.

  • @Moonblade042194
    @Moonblade0421944 жыл бұрын

    no feeders? A PNP without a feeder is a glorified toy

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    I mentioned I'd probably build bump feeders, but I sure like to build toys.

  • @mortensentim511
    @mortensentim5114 жыл бұрын

    I would suggest making the cart a little more stable so it wobbles less. The more I see videos like this the more I want to get some of my 3D printing parts and put one together myself.

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54144 жыл бұрын

    Yes, I agree, its only temporary. Makes it very easy to get all around it during development.

  • @ChunkySteveo
    @ChunkySteveo4 жыл бұрын

    This video popped up as a suggested, and it was great to watch you show off your machine. Love watching these OpenPNP setups. Do I need a PNP, no - do I want to build one? HELL YES! Hope to see if running in other videos. Thanks.

  • @gke3800
    @gke38004 жыл бұрын

    Good conversion

  • @420RcPilot
    @420RcPilot7 жыл бұрын

    Hey S. Nice to see your cave and the printed gizmos. Loved the pilot... Fusion360 is great. Be well and have fun with the projects. Jussi :-)

  • @kisssys5414
    @kisssys54147 жыл бұрын

    Hi Jussi, Thanks for commenting.