Monthly Archives: November 2011

Precision Flats

Several people have recommended that having flats on your motor shafts is a good idea. After having a couple of issues with my extruder motor gear slipping, I thought that it might be a good idea, too. The suggested way of doing it is to grip your motor shaft in a vice, and then file it down.

Fortunately, at my workplace, there’s a guy who’s a keen machinist. I passed the stepper motors along to him, and asked him if he could put some flats on the shafts. He thought it was a pretty easy job, and didn’t even ask for payment in beer. Here’s the results back a few days later.Stepper motor with precision flat

Now with some nice flats on the motor shafts, I thought that this would be a good time to fit the aluminium pulleys I had previously purchased. Unfortunately, the grub screws for these pulleys are far to long, they sit up into the tooth void when screwed down, causing the belt to skip over that tooth. To rectify this, I’d have to cut the screws down.

My first attempt was to cut the screw in half with a hacksaw. Unfortunately, this was a bit too much, and only left about 1mm of screw remaining. This should work in securing the pulley, but I’ll have to keep an eye on it.

For the second attempt, I just held the grub screw with a set of small pliers, and filed the end down to a shorter length. Although it was quite slow, it did the trick in getting the screw to just the right length.

Here’s the motor with the pulley attached. It looks great, and should really cut down on backlash. The belt fits in like glue.

Stepper motor with aluminium pulley

New Website

I’ve been doing a bit of work on a few websites lately.  One thing that I realised during my website work is that my hosting provider (GoDaddy) lets you host multiple sites, with multiple domain names, all under one hosting account. I hadn’t realised that before. I only thought that you could set up individual sites within folders, but not with domain names pointing to those folders. That allowed me to consolidate a bit of hosting all under one account. I kept the GoDaddy one. Even though it’s not the cheapest, it does provide you with a lot of control.

During the process, I investigated the WordPress blog system, and was pretty impressed by it. It’s got all the advantages of Blogger’s system, but it’s a lot more flexible, and being installed on your own host, it gives you total control of every aspect of the site. Plus, I like the aesthetics of the content-management system, and the innumerable themes which are available. I only found the Blogger themes to be ‘okay’ at best.

One thing I did was move my church’s website (coalcitycc.com.au) across to wordpress. This makes for much easier posting of the weekly sermons. Previous to that, the church’s website was just created in Apple’s iweb. Adding a new sermon each week involved a fair amount of messing around, and re-uploading the whole ‘sermon’ directory to the server.

Having a full content-management system with user control will also mean that I can create pages that other people can edit, without messing up the whole site. Ie, the youth leader can safely and securely edit the ‘youth’ page. This should allow for a much more dynamic website, as the individual group leaders can control and edit their own pages.

Since the church website was up and running nicely, I thought that I should think about moving this blog across. After thinking about it for a bit, I realised that there was no good reason to stay on blogger. I set up WordPress and imported across all my old posts. The biggest hassle was changing the DNS entries.

The main downside is that I’ve lost the comments that were already in Blogger’s system. Despite the import plug-in saying that it was able to import comments, it turned out not to be the case.

Of course, the other downside is that I need to do my own backups, but that’s not too onerous.