foofoodog wrote:nicknow123 wrote:The edges of thin areas, especially in small prints come out slightly mangled and odd. Is there something different I should be doing in my printing? Also, is there some kind of finisher I can put on my projects to give them a little bit of smoothness and shininess?
If your Z is too low you may get some head plowing and I have seen that cause jagged edges on the first layers.
Twist the Z screw clockwise a quarter turn and try again.
As for a finisher, after I sand something I give it a quick light acetone wipe and that brings the sheen back.
Others go so far as to give the parts an acetone vapor treatment which is not something that I think I will ever be trying, it is not for the faint of heart, or the timid, or the health and safety conscious ;P
So yeah, some 150/200 sand paper/sanding sponge and a quick acetone wipe is all I normally require. But I actually like the stratified look and as I get better at it, design or slicer/printer setup, I have to do less and less finish work.
there isn't anything wrong with acetone vapor baths. all you gotta do is do it outside, with an electric heat plate (no open flame) and don't stick your face in the vapor pot. lol
acetone vapors are heavier than air, so as long as you stand up you probably wont even smell it. no to mention its one chemical thats made in the human body at low concentrations (high concentration if your diabetic), so as long as you dont drink the stuff, you should be ok handling it. i know from professional experience, im a petrochemical surveyor on a major US port. i regular load and unload millions of gallons of the stuff on ships and barges
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besides that, what you mention is right. add a small xacto knife to your tool kit to help trim off support and brim.
but most important thing of all is to go through all the calibration steps, extruder steps per mm, z axis steps per mm, and xy axis circle calibration (also a steps per mm thing). once you get all that right, you should be extruding nice objects.
then print one of the replacement extruder sets, lawsy or alternate (though highly recommended), and a fan shroud for it, so you can blow air on your prints as the layers are put down. works great for PLA, would not do it on ABS without a full enclosure, but once you have a full enclosure on your printer, a fan improves print quality a TON with ABS as well, since what it sounds like is you have edges curling on you as layers are laid down. the fan stops that from happening at all