Hazer wrote:Your first layer is too flat. It is pushing filament out the sides. It also looks like under-extrusion between layers.
OK. The first answer you neglected: Is you Extruder Steps/mm set correctly? By this, if you manually command the extruder to move 100mm, does 100mm of filament get moved? The SD gets shipped with a default value of 138, and is usuallly wrong. You need to measure 100mm on the filament, and then command 100mm movement and measure the difference. Then you can calculate what the steps/mm needs to be and save it to EEPROM using Repetier.
This is done first, before you can adjust your flow rate.
Second, level your bed. I only say this because it is required before the next step, and considering your extrusion in the videos, your level is probably getting knocked out every time your nozzle hits a high bump.
Third, fix your Z height screw so that the first layer is about .3 to .25 thick. If you squish too much, you will have problems.
Fourth, now you can check your flow rate with the single wall cube. If the first three calibrations are not done correctly, this calibration will not be right.
Fifth, the X and Y belt tension calibration will help with the corners.
Lastly, I wonder more about the filament you are using. It helps greatly to do all of these calibrations using really high quality filament you can trust. Especially since all of the calibrations do not need to be altered when changing filament types/brands except for flow rate. I save filament configurations based upon manufacturer.
Must have missed it, but I answered the extruder calibration question in post #5, I tell it to pull in 100mm and it pulls in exactly 100mm. I followed the instructions from Solidoodle.
Yes the first layer is pretty pressed into the bed, but it tends to not stick if I don't extrude that low. Maybe it's worth looking into a glass bed and some hair spray or something. I'm not exactly sure how the first layer could effect every other layer above it in the way my print is effected, but I'll try backing off on the first layer a bit.
After I calibrated my extruder, I did print the single walled cube to calibrate line thickness, but the only way I could get accurate line thickness was by bringing the flow rate down to .8 which basically resulted in the gaps appearing between layers.
IanJohnson wrote:What is the extrusion width you are using? Did you set it manually or let Slic3r do it automatically? You should go thnner than the nozzle diameter, so if you have an older Solidoodle with a .35mm nozzle, don't use less that .35 as extrusion width, and if you have a newer one with the .4 nozzle, don't go thinner than .4. If the extrusion width is narrow than the nozzle diameter, there is less control over where the plastic lands.
I have the line width set to .42 and I believe I have a .35mm nozzle. Is there a reliable way to tell?
2n2r5 wrote:@gettingbored: Do you have another filament you can try? Did you have the same layer seperation issues at 205C? 180 might be a bit on the low side. 190-195 always seem to be the sweet spot for me.
The picture that shows the small layer shift and the extrusion problems. -> Did you notice the extruder skipping? or see if the filament was having trouble feeding? That also might be from the temps being a little low.
on a side note: Looks like you don't have any banding issues! Nice job.
Yeah there are still some separation issues with the higher temps, the pictures in the first post are with higher temps and you can definitely see those little gaps all over the place.
I tried to print some more with the lower temps and the extruder started skipping, which made me think the temps were too low at 180. I'll try going to 195 first layer and 190 for the rest to see how that works.
Do you have a recommended place to buy filament from, or one that you know ships consistent stuff? If I know a reliable distributor I'd like to get something that would be more "standard" so to speak, that way I can eliminate that variable.
Yeah getting rid of those banding issues was a huge relief, was probably the most annoying problem with the printer ever since nothing but swapping the threaded rod fixed it. Now I have 2.7 meters of M3 threaded rod I'll have to find an interesting use for.