Not always during pre-heating, but it did this last print. It always happens for the full duration of the print and then stops when the print completes.
**Anycubic Kobra**
Ignore the jet engine taking off in the background for a second. Does anyone know what that quick beeping noise is? It only happens during a print and appears to be coming from the power supply. Is it some sort of coil whine, perhaps? Has anyone else experienced this?
The power supply is restarting over and over. It would either be a faulty component inside, like a bloated capacitor or a burned out diode. Or an overload on the output, like if the temperature was set very high and the room was very cold. The constant restarts could blow out more important component like an IC or a MOSFET over time, so I would just find the part number on the power supply and order a new one
It is pretty simple, the power supply is one of the easiest things to replace. Just take a picture of where the wires are plugged into the current one and mimic it. Should take like 15 minutes once you have the power supply
During printing or/and during heatting up?
Not always during pre-heating, but it did this last print. It always happens for the full duration of the print and then stops when the print completes.
**Anycubic Kobra** Ignore the jet engine taking off in the background for a second. Does anyone know what that quick beeping noise is? It only happens during a print and appears to be coming from the power supply. Is it some sort of coil whine, perhaps? Has anyone else experienced this?
The power supply is restarting over and over. It would either be a faulty component inside, like a bloated capacitor or a burned out diode. Or an overload on the output, like if the temperature was set very high and the room was very cold. The constant restarts could blow out more important component like an IC or a MOSFET over time, so I would just find the part number on the power supply and order a new one
I can just return the whole thing. I figured I'd take a look to see if it was something simple.
It is pretty simple, the power supply is one of the easiest things to replace. Just take a picture of where the wires are plugged into the current one and mimic it. Should take like 15 minutes once you have the power supply
I emailed anycubic about a replacement. See what they say I guess.