I think it was the fillament all the time. The higher this indicator, the less tension you have on your filament. 0.1-0.2mm layer.

Happy you found the core of your problem. Got rid of the tape. Not playing around with anything else. Some fillament got chewed up inside. (just 1 or 2 layers all around would be good). If your fanshroud is touching the left frame, you should probably gently bend your fanshroud down. The most critical moment during a 3D […] Fully-printed #3DBenchy detached from buildplate. About 3DBenchy.com #3DBenchy is designed by Creative Tools – a 3D hardware and software provider – as a calibration and torture-test part for 3D … by ido » Wed Sep 13, 2017 1:04 pm, Post 60mm/s.

It looks like there are 2 problems. It looks like it mostly starts when it has to do retractions, which could indicate it has troubles passing by the PTFE coupler. Includes both FDM and SLA. Instead i get this or a bigger mess if i leave it for the night (it says 8 hours). Maybe during the process you bent it a little bit and it just got a bit too much range. This is PLA, right? And yes i got everything back together. by ido » Thu Sep 14, 2017 9:43 am, Return to “Help requests / Purchasing assistance”, Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests. Thanx again for the help and patience. A common misconception is that often the hardware is blamed when it is the material that lets us down.. Any ideas?

Until now i had just printed smaller stuff that apparently was held in place better than big surfaced things (like the bed leveling testprint). Do you have the original feeder on your Ultimaker? Could you take maybe one or two photo's of your prints where it goes wrong for some more perspective? Print Quality Troubleshooting Guide. Given the fact you are suffering from under extrusion I am inclined to think you have too little tension. 45mm/s outer.

Is your 3rd fan in your print head still working? I can't say for sure that this is what's happening here, but I find with some prints I get a self-worsening curling problem: Those are some good tips, thank you. If you do not consent with the use of tracking cookies, click “Refuse”.

***I had the printer for about a month now. Trouble with prints aka poor Benchy The higher this indicator, the less tension you have on your filament. The printer prints PLA benchys nearly perfectly at the default prusa settings.

Yeah i did the bed leveling (that seems to be ok now) i checked the settings. by slippyr4 » Tue Sep 12, 2017 8:54 am, Post I usually print PLA at 180 but you should look at the recommended range for yours. 15-50% infill. PTFE looks super clean, so that is not it. by Aziraphale » Tue Sep 12, 2017 5:32 pm, Post Agreed, that's PLA with insufficient cooling. With the patern on the cabine, its most likely both. The difference between machine producton dates was on the old (black) feeder of the UM2, on the UM2+ feeder (white) it should be set to the center position for PLA. ***Ok. Ps. A common tip to test that theory is to point an additional fan at the part being printed (try to avoid cooling the bed too much). We have compiled an extensive list of the most common 3D printing issues along with the software settings that you can use to solve them. by ido » Tue Sep 12, 2017 7:56 am, Post You have a pretty big temperature range for printing PLA, around 30-40 degrees. By Looks like inadequate cooling to me. Thanx for the advice. Is the adjustment screw still in the housing? Did you ever take your feeder apart? PART 2 https://youtu.be/W7of7LC2-HY Struggling with your 3d printer's outputs? And why do you have the tape installed, is your heated bed defective? ***No it's working. I would recommend 30mm/s max. We're looking for ... https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2316970, Do you use 3D printing at work?