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12-31-2013, 10:34 AM #1
- Join Date
- Dec 2013
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- 3
Brand newbie - what is wrong with these prints?
Hi, everybody. First post!
Being a masochist, I put it in my 9-year old son's head that he should ask Santa for a 3d Printer. Santa shopped around and got a 6" MakerFarm Prusa i3. Turns out Santa is not such a speedy 3D Printer builder, and only got the kit about 3/4 of the way done before Christmas morning. Oh, well, he left a nice note telling my son that he thought we would enjoy finishing it together. (Seemed to work). Working on it with my son was fantastic, which was my present to myself. We spent days getting the printer very close to correct (Colin was great and patient, by the way).
We've spent the last two or three days doing test prints and are having trouble with anything taller than the test hollow cube. Can someone help us diagnose? I flashed the RAMPS to up the max Magma hot end temp. I also changed my print bed temp to 110/110 in Slic3r. My X-axis belt as a little loose, and I will print some tensioners from Thingiverse to fix that soon, but I don't think that is the problem.
The prints in the picture are little creeper figures my son designed in PrinterCraft. They should have a square head that narrower than the base. I arranged them from left to right, latest to earliest. They are sticking well to the glass now (getting the Z-end stop right was tricky) but at some point, they shift and I get the following result. I have a big brim on them, and and printing with support material turned on in Slic3r (I didn't remove it in the leftmost print).
One weird thing is they seem to be getting closer to finished in the last two prints without me doing anything.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
IMAG0955_BURST002.jpgLast edited by BKTarHeel; 12-31-2013 at 11:36 AM.
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01-06-2014, 07:55 PM #2
Please uploead the stl file so we can play around with it to see what's going wrong.
Old Man Emu
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01-06-2014, 08:50 PM #3
- Join Date
- Oct 2013
- Location
- Honolulu, HI
- Posts
- 199
Those items you printed are very tall and skinny. What you see towards the top is that the layers are not cooling before the hot end goes back over it and adds another layer. If you watch you will even see that the print looks "rubbery" while it is doing this. One way that folks fix this is adding a fan pointed at the print. Another way is to print two or three of those at once so that there is time for the print to cool before adding the next layer.
Cheers,
KDog
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01-08-2014, 02:15 PM #4
- Join Date
- Dec 2013
- Posts
- 3
Thanks to both! Kdog, I'll try yours before going any further. The best part of that solution is that it forces my son to go back to the drawing board, which is good for his strength of character!
Printed Model of Motor Cooling Fan...
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