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Thread: Wireless connection solution?
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08-10-2015, 02:07 PM #1
Wireless connection solution?
I have purchased a FlashForge Creator Pro some time ago and I need to find some sort of wireless connectivity solution to it.
The thing is I am not home all the time and I want to keep an eye on the printing process and be able to cancel it remotely if something goes wrong.
I already installed an old ip camera that gives me a great angle over the build plate.. but its not enough.
- I thought about an Eyefi WiFi SD Card but it doesn't give me direct control I can get via USB cable. I maybe can sync it with my computer and transfer my gcode files to it, but I still have to be there to manually start/stop the printer.
- Get a Smart Socket - gives me the ability to remotely shutdown the printer. But its not a safe shutdown. Just cutting off the power and I don't want to damage the printer.
- A USB cable can't reach that far and I don't want a whole cable to run through my apartment. So maybe some sort of a WiFI USB "cable"? Sounds stupid.
- Get a laptop? not really an option atm.
Suggestions anyone?
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08-10-2015, 05:05 PM #2
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Forget the USB. Pick up the RS232 Tx and Rx lines and feed them to a Moxa serial to ethernet.
There are USB <> ethernet but I have no experience with them.
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08-10-2015, 09:15 PM #3
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- Aug 2015
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suggest you pick up a raspberry pi2 and run octoprint.
you can feed your rpi2 with either eithernet or wifi
you can setup a usb cam and there are free android apps that let you control your printer and view the camera
working great for me
edit : just make sure to install the gpx plugin
if you use slic3r you can go right from slic3r to the printer/octoprint
if use use simplify3d, you can just turn off generate .x3g and save the gcode to your desktop and then drag and drop to your octoprint browser session.Last edited by ffvader; 08-10-2015 at 10:38 PM.
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08-11-2015, 12:36 AM #4
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08-11-2015, 02:53 AM #5
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There is a huge long thread about using Octoprint that aoyu should read. It is probably the easiest solution if it does what you need.
Inside your printer there are two Atmega processors, one for the printer functions and one small one (8U2 or 16U2) that only handles USB <> RS232. It is possible to pick up the TX and RX lines off the motherboard and use a serial port to talk to the printer if you wanted to, people do this when the Atmega for serial control goes knackered (as mine has).
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08-11-2015, 05:46 AM #6
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08-11-2015, 05:50 AM #7
install teamviewer, free utility that will give you total remore control over your computer - from anywhere and pretty much any device.
It's free, it doesn't go through a 3rd party server and it works brilliantly. (even with linux :-) )
It's what i use for remote support for my clients.
www.teamviewer.com
It's hilarious that mj's first thought is to whip out his soldering iron and start attacking the computer motherboard. Particularly when the seril headers are still included on motherboards. If you want a physical serial port you can just buy one and plug it in. No soldering required.
Even the latest boards I use still have serial connectors - you just don't get the cable and socket in the box.
But in your case, teamviewer is most likely the better bet.
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08-11-2015, 06:34 AM #8
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08-11-2015, 09:23 AM #9
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If makerbot slicer exports gcode (not .xg3) then yes it would work because the gpx plugin on the octoprint server will convert it to .xg3 and send it to your printer.
Not sure i would suggest team view or hardware mod (not that i have a problem with hardware mod's - but the octoprint approach is much safer and easier)
if you use teamviewer, you are still susceptible to pc crashes, loosing interet. etc.
depending on your skills with a soldering iron you may or may not want to mess with that, i was originally going to go that route until i discovered the octoprint route and since my local pc store had rpi2's for $29 i figured what the heck.
I'm happy with that method because it allows me remote control of my printer, while viewing it through a web cam and i can shut my pc off at night and just let my printer and print server do all the work.
bonus i got to print an rpi2 case
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08-12-2015, 10:17 AM #10
well if the pc crashes - the print stops anyway.
And even a raspberry pi can crash - it's a computer.
The quickest, cheapest and simplest way - my three standard criteria - is teamviewer.
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