🚀 Elevate Your 3D Printing Game with Silent Precision!
The TMC2208 V1.2 Stepper Motor Driver is a cutting-edge solution for 3D printing enthusiasts, offering ultra-quiet operation, high peak current capabilities, and seamless compatibility with existing electronics. Designed for precision and ease of use, this driver module enhances your 3D printing experience while reducing heat output.
A**R
Awesome
Absolutely the best thing I did for my Anycubic i3 mega s printer. They work great and holy moly is it quiet.
R**N
Amazingly Quiet!
I upgraded my DIY motorized blinds from DRV8825 to the TMC2208 and I am amazed at how much quieter these are than the DRV's. I mean, it is night and day. And they are almost 100% pin compatible. There is no sleep or reset pin on these but the step, direction, enable, microstep, motor,and voltage pins are all the same. One limitation though, the only way to go into full-step mode is to use them in UART, which I didn't want to go to the trouble to do so I am running them in half-step mode and they are still just as quiet. Just apply your VCC to the MS1 pin to get the 1/2 step setup.Also, they probably wouldn't have been a problem but it appeared to me that the solder joints on the top of the pins got too close to the heatsink for my comfort. So I trimmed them with my micro-cutters before applying the heat-sink to give extra clearance, just in case. And you will need the heatsinks. These do get much hotter than the DRV's.
C**B
Problem free drivers
Works great on a MKS gen L board running Marlin 2.x.x.These are setup as standalone drivers out of the box. Make sure to disconnect steppers, power up board and tune voltage first.Pots were decent, a little overshoot when adjusting so go slowly.Would buy these again.
A**4
Work Great!
These come in their own individual anti-static baggie with a screwdriver and a large aluminum heatsink that you have to stick on.They work great on my Anycubic Mega S 3D Printer and plug directly in where the old ones go, but you will have to swap the Motor 1 and Motor 2 phases on the motor connector that connects to them if you are doing something similar.The heat sink also sticks up higher than anything that it might replace, so you may have to modify cooling fan brackets and similar depending on what type of equipment you are installing these into.
J**B
A recommended upgrade. Even better in UART mode.
I'm using mine with an Anycubic Mega S. They work great. So much quieter. I waited a couple of months to install them as I wanted to be confident in the printer and my own ability. It was pretty easy. I did wind up using some other "low profile" heatsinks (spare raspberry pi kit) instead of the included ones as they were too tall for my fan arrangement. I do recommend upgrading the driver fan. I set the VRef to around .85 volts from the factory 1.1 volt. You can attach the leads of your meter with alligator clips to ground and the adjustment tool and measure and adjust the voltage at the same time as it is present on the potentiometer. The stepper motors run cool with no missed steps.Prints are as good or better. I notice a slight change in the interference pattern created by the print head motion in an otherwise smooth surface on a calibration cube. That makes sense with the step interpolation. Otherwise I can't tell a difference. It's astounding how much it changes with the same motors just using different impulses. Not sure why they don't use them to begin with other than a bit more cost. It's now a better printer. *UPDATE* I eventually switched them from Legacy mode to UART. It's tricky to solder the three little pads, but I got it done. It's definitely worth the effort if you feel comfortable performing the modification.
R**M
Works prefect on my Ramps 1.4 in standalone mode.
These TMC2209's saved me from upgrading to SKR controller. They are very quite and smooth on the Ramps 1.4 controller. On mine the tiny pot looked liked it wasn't turning or adjusting ref voltage. Looking close I found I needed a small flat blade screwdriver to get snug in the slot. Adjusted all three (I already had one on hand) to about 0.6 volts. Great upgrade any easy to do.
T**.
Love these drivers!
Awesome upgrade! Was running Arduino/RAMPS1.4 with A4988s. Had unrelated issues but decided to change the drivers for TMC2208s. They were a drop in replacement (I use them in legacy mode) and are just fantastic! The noise level is just about zero. The only sound I hear when I print is the retraction and a bit of motor "grind" when the printer homes at the start of a print job. Can easily forget it is on! It is really THAT much quieter!.Note on setting the driver vref, I tried it the way the doc says and was not making any progress. Instead I followed the instructions on a youtube video and it worked great. Connect your volt-meter ground to the board wired ground to the power supply. Connect your positive probe to a small metal screw driver using an alligator clip. Watch the volt-meter readout as you turn the screw driver. Easy. Get the correct sized screw driver and verify it with the board powered off. Practice getting the screw driver onto the "pot" without touching anything else. Then power all. Connect volt-meter and adjust pots. I started with about 0.95 per and had to adjust from there over a few hours of practice prints. You don't mind if the stepper motors get warm but they should not be too hot to hold on to. If you go too low you will get skips so warm motor is OK. Have fun!
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago