Hey 3d printing people.
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@demofox here's an annotated diagram
The magenta regions are places where it looks like your temperature is unstable. The red arrow is the axis where it looks like the slip happened, and the red X is where I'm guessing where the print head might have crashed into the print causing the slip.
As for the print separating from the raft at the bottom, I am unsure whether that is just a trick of shadows in the picture, otherwise it is most likely Archimedes's fault.
@demofox note that the part at the top looks fine. That is because the print head is moving less on the horizontal plane, which is causing the hot end to loose less heat. Usually you'd see the opposite problem (warping from running too warm) there.
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@demofox note that the part at the top looks fine. That is because the print head is moving less on the horizontal plane, which is causing the hot end to loose less heat. Usually you'd see the opposite problem (warping from running too warm) there.
@demofox To fix the hot end problem, try to make ambient temperature more steady. My favorite trick is to put a desk fan near by such that the hot end is always under constant airflow no matter what position the gantry and plate are in, and wait for the temperature to stabilize before you start printing. Build chambers are also popular for stabilizing the temperature, but they tend to run hot which can introduce its own problems. The critical thing is steady ambient temperature.
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@demofox To fix the hot end problem, try to make ambient temperature more steady. My favorite trick is to put a desk fan near by such that the hot end is always under constant airflow no matter what position the gantry and plate are in, and wait for the temperature to stabilize before you start printing. Build chambers are also popular for stabilizing the temperature, but they tend to run hot which can introduce its own problems. The critical thing is steady ambient temperature.
@demofox as for the belt slip, lube up the rods
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@demofox more things that could potentially help with the temperature problem since your printer for the most part seems to be running too cool:
- run it slower
- run it a little hotter
the air flow thing is the most important one though. you'll want to make sure the airflow is consistent first.
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@demofox more things that could potentially help with the temperature problem since your printer for the most part seems to be running too cool:
- run it slower
- run it a little hotter
the air flow thing is the most important one though. you'll want to make sure the airflow is consistent first.
@demofox I scanned through the other replies, and I want to also note that the temperature thing is the more critical thing to diagnose first, since if a layer fails to bond properly it can warp and create an obstacle for the nozzle to crash into, which can cause belt slippage like in your print.
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@demofox I scanned through the other replies, and I want to also note that the temperature thing is the more critical thing to diagnose first, since if a layer fails to bond properly it can warp and create an obstacle for the nozzle to crash into, which can cause belt slippage like in your print.
@aeva thank you so much! Interestingly, its still firmly attached to the raft, but maybe that is only in the center.
3d printing is quite involved apparently!
This is also a 50$ printer that is a year old so maybe not the best setup :P -
@aeva thank you so much! Interestingly, its still firmly attached to the raft, but maybe that is only in the center.
3d printing is quite involved apparently!
This is also a 50$ printer that is a year old so maybe not the best setup :P@demofox sure thing :) 3D printing is a bottomless dive of fascinating interconnected technical problems that can burn your house down. At the zenith of my 3D printing hobby I had four printers (two frankenprinters and two industrial prototypes), was writing my own custom slicing software, and had a salary from a 3D printer manufacturer. Then, for reasons, I burned out on that particular special interest and went off to live a simple life as a game developer.
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@demofox sure thing :) 3D printing is a bottomless dive of fascinating interconnected technical problems that can burn your house down. At the zenith of my 3D printing hobby I had four printers (two frankenprinters and two industrial prototypes), was writing my own custom slicing software, and had a salary from a 3D printer manufacturer. Then, for reasons, I burned out on that particular special interest and went off to live a simple life as a game developer.
@demofox however, I appreciate the powerful chaotic energy of the phrase "fifty dollar three-dee printer"
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@demofox however, I appreciate the powerful chaotic energy of the phrase "fifty dollar three-dee printer"
@demofox this was my first 3D printer https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@aeva/113516625532069448 I built it from a defective kit at an event at my local hackerspace back in 2011 ish, corrected the problems with the frame in software, used it to upgrade itself, and got pretty good prints out of it while I was still using it. The thing frequently needed to be recalibrated due to the frame bolts needing to be retightened periodically.
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@demofox this was my first 3D printer https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@aeva/113516625532069448 I built it from a defective kit at an event at my local hackerspace back in 2011 ish, corrected the problems with the frame in software, used it to upgrade itself, and got pretty good prints out of it while I was still using it. The thing frequently needed to be recalibrated due to the frame bolts needing to be retightened periodically.
@demofox anyways what I mean to say is there is hope for your machine, it just might require a lot of tinkering
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@demofox anyways what I mean to say is there is hope for your machine, it just might require a lot of tinkering
@demofox also fwiw I think there is still some value in starting with a janky printer and learning how to take proper care of it before moving on to an expensive one, because then you'll be better prepared to do maintenance on the expensive one when it inevitably has a problem, which it will, because all 3D printers are fundamentally cursed objects.