Some EEPROM allocations do not use the hole allocated space:
- EEPROM_FARM_NUMBER is only numeric 000-999 and only uses 2 bytes to store the Farm number BUT allocated 3 bytes. Added EEPROM_FREE_NR1 as free space that can be used
- EEPROM_CRASH_DET just changes 1 byte to save it status [on/off] but allocated 5 bytes. Added EEPROM_FREE_NR2 to EEPROM_FREE_NR5 as free space that can be used
Just after setting up the w2m matrix, call "clamp_to_software_endstops"
on the current_position (initially [0,0,0]) to move it to the effective
minimal position, which is usually [0,0,non-zero] due to MIN_Z and the
negative probe offset.
This is required to calculate correctly the first relative move:
planning X+10 would unexpectedly calculate a Z shift otherwise.
Tune the "soft" filament recheck to be more in-line with the latest
changes. Relax the thresholds so that a poorly tracking filament
that managed to trigger a recheck can still pass as long as /some/
motion is detected.
Hide the unused fsensor_oq_result() behind the FSENSOR_QUALITY define,
which is likely broken currently anyway.
Cleanup and simplify all the OQ defines.
When doing a PAT9125 "soft check", use two different speeds between
retraction and extrusion. This increases the chances that we can
track the surface.
Depending on the filament surface and moving speed, the PAT9125 sensor
can stop being able to track movement.
In such cases, instead of triggering false errors and/or relying on
previous states, read and use the exposure data off the sensor and
increase error counts only for poorly exposed images instead, which
is a good indicator of a far-away (or missing!) tracking surface.
Rewrite the logic behind the "chunking"/error count behind the PAT9125.
Basic idea: check the _direction_ of movement returned by the optical
sensor and compare it to the direction of the stepper. To avoid doing
this continuosly (and because the optical sensor doesn't necessarily
have the accuracy to track small distances), do so in chunks.
Each time a chunk doesn't match the expected direction, increase the
error count.
Several improvements were done to the previous code:
- Increase the chunk window: this ensures that a filament with
poor response returns an usable direction, while also moving the
average return values from the sensor in the middle of the 12 bits
available for maximum effectiveness.
- Since the returned values are more reliable, reduce the error count
(1.25mm*4 = ~5mm before runout detection)
- Track _both_ positive and negative movement, although only trigger
errors during extrusion (necessary due to several assumptions made
in the mmu/unloading code)
- Do not reset the counters for each block: accumulate distances
correctly, allowing detection of any block lenght.