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1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Sat Jan 06, 2018 2:55 pm
by Renha
Hi. I was trying to print this part
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1278865/ with 1.2 mm Volcano nozzle using 0.065 inch trimmer line nylon, and results aren't great.
Temperature was 256 degrees celsius, print speed 60 mm/s (while was lowered by 50% later, without visible improvements). What have I done wrong?
Re: 1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Sat Jan 06, 2018 4:00 pm
by Renha
Cura was the slicer
Re: 1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Sat Jan 06, 2018 7:14 pm
by gchristopher
Hmm, looks under-extruded, plus that's a pretty small test print for such a big nozzle. I'd start by checking that cura knows the filament thickness, then check the filament travel distance in the extruder is as expected, then do a thin wall print to see how close the wall is to the expected thickness?
Re: 1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2018 6:47 pm
by Renha
Yes! thank you gchristopher, Cura was sure I want to make 0.4 mm lines with 1.2 mm nozzle (it was automatically calculated, looks like bug to me).
EDIT: yep, that's a bug:
https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/3095
New cubes are much better on the sides, but top and infill are almost the same - probably, nylon doesn't have time to cool down enough (I've seen nozzle dragging previous layers).
But decreasing of temperature doesn't help, 236 degrees cube is almost exactly same as 256 degrees one. I have not active cooling because I thought nylon hates cooling, so I built machine without it.
Re: 1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Tue Jan 09, 2018 3:44 am
by Renha
done some tests with latest settings, found huge oozing. My retraction is set to 2 mm, should I make it say 5 mm?
Re: 1.2 mm Volcano + trimmer line
Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 2:30 pm
by gchristopher
That progression of improved prints is pretty impressive for using trimmer line!
Have you tried any other slicers? I've found print quality issues are really worth investigating different slicer outputs to try different available options or compare bugs/artifacts. (I'm personally using slic3r prusa fork mostly right now.)
Have you tried printing two at once or printing a tower next to it? You'd expect a lot of stringing, but that might be a way to see how much cooling is addressed by giving each layer more time. (Or maybe just print slower?)
I'm wary of the "print cooler" method of addressing that, because I've had mechanical parts with layer adhesion issues before.