Mpatch

joined 10 months ago
[–] Mpatch 5 points 9 months ago

Now do it like 5 or 6 more times on the rest of the bed and now it's textured for extra adhesion.

[–] Mpatch 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Can you post the g code ?

[–] Mpatch 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (3 children)

What printer do you use. This is a mechanical issue. It's something binding as the one x or y is traveling could be a bearing or the stepper motor it self. It prevents the arc from being fully formed even though the machine thinks it is key point you made is that randomized z seam leaves the same mess, but if notice it's not all the layers are cut short only some.

Take the belt off and move the axis by hand slow and easy do you feel anything that isn't smooth like silk? That would be it. Feel the stepper is the drive gear tight any slip ?? Any play in the shaft side?

Edit

Looking at the pictures again I'd bet that if you went taller and printed faster, it would be even worse because the bad part got hotter and more bound up more Alternatively printing faster might make it better because you have the inertia to push past the binding spot.

[–] Mpatch 4 points 9 months ago

Ig you think that's bad wait until you get multiple retractions going that the rocking motion of the 3kg Is probably going to be enough to pull the filament right out of the extruder.

[–] Mpatch 1 points 9 months ago

Okay but where is stew recipe. I want stew

[–] Mpatch 1 points 9 months ago

120grit sand paper give it a scuff and rubing alcohol before each print. That solved almost all of my issues with bed adhesion and let me get away with it where normally it would fail. Anything else it's probably out of level bed or actual frame of the machine has a bend or low spot. If your z offset was bad you would have that happening all over the the first layer. If you have a bl touch on your set up, make a grid amd write down each number if there is a difference in the corners it's bed level If it's middles / sides it's a low spot in frame some materials tolerate out of level better then others.

[–] Mpatch 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

How isbthe chatter on that? I see the 20 pounds of bungies on the thing

[–] Mpatch 2 points 9 months ago

Thanks that actualy helped the should I questions abit. And gave me a good idea with the c clamps.

[–] Mpatch 3 points 9 months ago

You gota report that to the consumer goods or something like. They can get fined very big deneros for selling under weight goods. Like it's a realy big deal.

[–] Mpatch 2 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Yeah i crashed it like 3 times already. Does that make me a seasoned veteran? Lucky me it cones with a cutout clutch that has saved , the work, machine and my pants.

Right now It's less so questions as more of I don't know what I don't know.

Tool angles and geometry Is one, is carbide viable for one of these or should I be using high speed steel for boring?

For speeds and feeds do you use the general rules as you would for turning or milling or something else?

Work holding fixtures any recommendations on what is essential to have at the ready? Most used ?

[–] Mpatch 2 points 10 months ago

Thanks! That was one of the first things I watched on that machine. Of all the equipment we got over the past few years, this one was just droped off at the door I didn't even get a chance to talk to previous operator.

Yes the work that Curtis does is incredible. And I am in a similar line of work. Just years behind in experience and knowhow.

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