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04-13-2020, 06:41 AM #1
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Squiggly/wavy printing help please
I have recently started printings basic designs but unfortunately the models are suffering from squiggly lines in part which I am at a loss with. I have tried printing on best setting but it doesn't make any difference. I am printing on a flashforge Inventor 2 using flashprint. All help appreciated. Thank you.
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04-13-2020, 07:01 AM #2
are you using supports ?
Without them things like the ears - which are basically trying to print on thin air - won't work.
Rest of the model looks fine.
Use the 'advanced' settings in flashprint, that way you have a bunch of options for using supports etc.
Pretty much NEVER use the bog standard settings for anything.
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04-13-2020, 07:08 AM #3
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04-14-2020, 04:27 AM #4
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04-14-2020, 11:07 AM #5
yep always worth tryung different speeds, layer size and temperatures.
Pretty much every make of filament and every colour behaves a little differently.
The additives used to create colour all change how the basic filament behaves.
For example: yellow filament is both the hardest to make and the hardest to get clean prints from.
Whereas white is usually the easiest. Red and black are close behind with black also being fairly easy to use.
A fairly safe place to start with pla would be:
50mm/s print speed
200c print temp
65c bed temp (depending on your print surface anything from 50-65 will give best results)
0.2mm layer height
retractions - I think the adventurer is a direct drive extruder, so start with: 1.8mm retraction distance, 60mms retraction speed and adjust both up or down depending on how much or little stringing you get.
The goal is zero stringing :-)
Stringing is caused by the head moving while the molten filamnent is still coming out of the nozzle. So the best way to get better prints is actually to nail the retraction settings for each filament.
Once you have make SURE you save those settings as a seperate profile.
Building up a profile library is MUCH easier than trying to remember a dozen or so settings for each filament :-)
3d printing is as much an art as a science. And each machine will behave differently.
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04-14-2020, 03:03 PM #6
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- Apr 2020
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Printer will print perfect...
06-14-2024, 10:44 AM in Tips, Tricks and Tech Help