Voron Everything on a Stick by Blamm
Voron Everything on a Stick takes Daylight on a Stick and combines it with Disco on a Stick: white and RGB to illuminate your printer!
Each stick contains several Neopixel compatible RGBW LEDs (SKC6812RGBW-NW-B):
- Colour temperature (white): natural white (4000K)
- Red: 160-320mcd per LED
- Green: 450-815mcd per LED
- Blue: 120-240mcd per LED
- White: 1500-2100mcd
All sticks come including pre-soldered 90 degree JST-XH 2.54 connectors.
Available in three versions:
- Everything on a Matchstick (10 natural-white LEDs, 158x11mm, for V0.x or other printers for ants)
- Everything on a Stick (18 natural-white LEDs, 270x11mm, for Voron sizes of 250mm and upwards)
- Everything on a Stick XXL (25 natural-white LEDs, 370x11mm, for Voron 350 or bigger printers)
This article is for a single stick, you typically need two per printer.
Installation & config:

The brackets for 2020 profiles are mounted to the profile using an M3x6 or M3x8 SHCS screw together with a roll-in nut, and need an M3 heat insert to mount the strip onto the bracket itself.

On 1515 frames like the V0.x the brackets for 1515 profiles are used. They take an M3 heat insert and clip into the extrusion. Mount the pcb on them with an M3x6 BHCS screw.
To control the lights, please use a RGB output of your controller board.
Each stick has 5V, GND and DataIn. There are two DataOuts, each end of the stick but only use one of these at the same time.
These lights use 5V power and so need quite a bit of current. Make sure not to overload your 5V power supply and don’t daisy chain the power supply of sticks together.
Klipper Config:
Klipper config reference. Replace the chain_length with the number of LEDs fitting for your variant of stick (see below).
Duet/RepRap Config:
For the RGBW-BW ones, put them on the RGBW output of your controlboard and configure them according to the RRF config reference.
Commands for use:
M150 X4 ;Sets mode to bit-banged RGBW NeoPixel M150 R50 U50 B50 W50; Sets all LEDs to red = 50, blue = 50, green = 50. white = 50 (on 0-255 scale)
More info here













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