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02-16-2017, 09:39 PM #1
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New to 3D printing, how can i print a test line before prints?
It seems that none of my prints have that test line and I don't know if that is SOP for 3D printing but it seems that it somewhat cleans the print nozzle and allows for a clean base. I think it's called a skirt but is it something I need to manually add to the beginning of my g code or does the app usually add it for me?. If I don't have it the first line i sometimes have issues and many times it just causes the base to get dislodged as the next adjacent line comes in contact w/ that first skewed line. I am using a Maker Select 3D and currently using Cura if that matters. I did create a few things with tinkercad as well so perhaps it doesn't add those lines to the gcode?
Thanks much guys.
DaveLast edited by TTVert; 02-17-2017 at 02:28 AM.
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02-17-2017, 05:07 AM #2
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I'm not sure if I fully understand but is it the skirt like this?
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02-17-2017, 12:13 PM #3
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Sorry is the skirt the dotted line or the purple? I believe either would be fine. I think i understand better now after some more reading. It seems you may be able to set a global printer config that will print a skirt around anything you print. With this particular printer it homes X/Y and then prints a glob, retracts and drags that bit of filament to prevent curling and cleansup any residue. Is this though process correct?
Thanks
DaveLast edited by TTVert; 02-17-2017 at 12:37 PM.
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02-18-2017, 12:18 AM #4
My printer does one automatically if it can fit, runs about a 50mm line down and back along one edge. It's not an option for me, it just does it, even if I don't want it.
If you want a test line, you could add another object to the slicer, and make sure it prints that one first. Dunno how you'd do that though.
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02-18-2017, 12:24 AM #5
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Thanks it appears that it's just a printer config where the start/end gcode is. I added it in there and I appears to be added to all my prints. Can someone confirm I am doing the correct thing here and not causing more issues? As of now it is printing everything very well.
Dave
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02-19-2017, 02:16 AM #6
Does it work?
Then I'd run with it. If you start seeing issues, you know what you changed, and how to fix it.
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02-20-2017, 01:19 AM #7
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The purple line is the actual skirt. The dot line is the moving range of the extruder. I think manually add a skirt by yourself is also working. Mine is just the one key solution for all the steps you mentioned.
If you can post a picture that will be better to understand
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02-20-2017, 12:54 PM #8
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02-20-2017, 02:45 PM #9
it's usually a setting in the slicer - under skirt or brim.
I don't bother with a skirt.
Occasionally use a brim to anchor very thin parts.
So what slicer do you use ?
That's the program that takes the stl file and slices it into layers tha printer can print.
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02-20-2017, 03:14 PM #10
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I'm using cura 15.04.6. (I print via usb and 2.3 and 2.4 won't support my printer ) I didn't see an option to set brim specs other than "brim line amount" What is the purpose of a skirt, to just further purge the print nozzle?
Dave
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