Gomisan wrote:As for 90C ... that seems very low anyway. I set my heater at 115C and give my glass a good amount of time to warm up, and if I'm printing I wont turn off the heater at all for hours, so I can get things as stable as possible in my enclosure.
Thats actually the recommended temperature for the SD bed by SD themselves, and there is valid arguments to it. Its been gone through before, but basically, you don't need it that hot, and in fact, cranking it hotter, whilst it does outwardly appear to 'fix it' to some extent, is really only plastering over the problem.
You can succesfully print with full adhesion on the SD bed at a mere 90°, and actually get LESS warping, as at the lower tempreatures, as your heater isn't driving as hard on as short a duty cycle, the bed temp *over the surface of the whole bed* is more equal, there is less delta between the thermistor and the bed edges.
At >90°, you will begin developing large 10-25° delta's across the bed surface... at 115, you will certainly be getting 115 at the thermistor, but the bed edges will be down around 90 anyway... meaning that on a LARGE print you will actually get *worse* warping and lifting, as parts of the model cool at vastly different rates to the rest of the model.
Anyway - yes its counter intuitive, but its to do with temp consitency.... have a look at the thermal images I posted months ago to get a better understanding...
Lower Temp == More Even Temp.... More Even Temp == less propensity to warp regardless of model size ...
The much higher temps thrown around for the likes of RepRaps is due to their need to combat 'drafts' that will rapidly cool the bed - so they over compensate. On a Solidoodle - you just stick cardboard on the sides of the frame, problem solved...