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    "waves" on rounded prints

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    • gloomyandyundefined
      gloomyandy
      last edited by

      If the artefacts you are seeing seem to be related to the STL have you tried increasing the resolution of the STL to see if that improves things?

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      • KipKundefined
        KipK
        last edited by

        I got this issue this week. Printer was like moving/extruding in wavy pattern around circles with unusual noise.
        It was my extruder jerk/acc that was way too high.
        Lowering it from 1000 to 300 srk and 2000 to 600 acc solved theproblem ( Orbiter )

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        • Argoundefined
          Argo @Tinchus
          last edited by

          @tinchus

          The quality setting of the exported model isn't set to "Highest".

          You may want to try the "curve smoothing" feature of SuperSlicer.

          dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @Argo
            last edited by

            @argo is the speed constant when it prints those curves? If it isn't, that could be caused by the XY jerk limit being set to low, and it could accentuate the facets in the STL file.

            Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
            Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
            http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

            Argoundefined Tinchusundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Argoundefined
              Argo @dc42
              last edited by

              @dc42

              If the model is poorly exported and If I forgot to enable the "curve smoothing" feature in SuperSlicer, it's more or less a "corner" to "corner" transition for the printer (RRF) with acceleration and deacceleration for every "corner". So the speed is not constant and it has to respect the set jerk speed.

              The interesting bit though is that @Tinchus mentions that the object is perfectly round printed with Marlin. Maybe Marlin's junction deviation has some kind of planner built in that assumes it's a round object and thereby prints it round? Then it would be interesting to know with what thresholds Marlin is working with so it does not smoothes out edges that are wanted.
              Right now every printer in the house is running RRF (+1 Klipper) so I can't test that.

              Here is an example of curve smoothing within the slicer software. Advantage is that STLs downloaded from the internet or exported from CAD can be rather small because the additional information is added within the slicer software.

              Sliced without curve smoothing, F360 export setting "medium":

              without_curve_smoothing.png

              And with curve smoothing enabled:

              curve_smoothing.png

              Tinchusundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • dc42undefined
                dc42 administrators
                last edited by dc42

                @argo said in "waves" on rounded prints:

                If the model is poorly exported and If I forgot to enable the "curve smoothing" feature in SuperSlicer, it's more or less a "corner" to "corner" transition for the printer (RRF) with acceleration and deacceleration for every "corner". So the speed is not constant and it has to respect the set jerk speed.

                Increasing the allowed XY jerk will avoid that. Alternatively, export the model to STL with finer resolution.

                Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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                • o_lampeundefined
                  o_lampe @Tinchus
                  last edited by

                  @tinchus said in "waves" on rounded prints:

                  @o_lampe jajajaja I guess it is a good news for me but it doesnt feel like that jajajaja

                  The M669 option you talk about, seems to e only available for 3.3 version. My problem now is to upgrade but also can you elaborate on how to use these options and how they work? Im still confused on how this behaviour of my printer is "good because is accurate"

                  I tried it myself with a 5:1 scaled up cylinder (very coarse now) and played with different numbers. They don't make a difference.
                  As others have stated before, you have to refine the STL export and or use smoothing options (if available)

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                  • Tinchusundefined
                    Tinchus @dc42
                    last edited by

                    @dc42 I thought about this, but my config it is using 1200 of jerk and 6500 of acceleration.

                    In the extruder I have set 500 as jerk and max speed of 2400 mm/min, wich I could say never is reached and that value os only there just to have a high speed when I feed the printer at the beggining of the new spool. My extruder is a nema17 motor (pancake) attached to a bondtech. The motor of extruder is ore than capable to suppor that jer/accel/speed or do you think I shpould lower these values

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                    • Tinchusundefined
                      Tinchus @Argo
                      last edited by

                      @argo What values exactly are you using with curve smoothing in superslicer?

                      Argoundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Argoundefined
                        Argo @Tinchus
                        last edited by

                        @tinchus

                        Precision: 0.02mm
                        Angle detection 120° each
                        Cutoff: 4-6mm (depending on how bad the exported model is)

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                        • Tinchusundefined
                          Tinchus @Argo
                          last edited by

                          @argo Update on this issue: using the curve smoothing solves the problem. Also, I made a copy of the original STL using solidworks, exported it as STL but using max quality for the STL and also the print came out PERFECT.
                          So all this issue is about the STL quality
                          Thanks all for the help

                          Argoundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Argoundefined
                            Argo @Tinchus
                            last edited by

                            @tinchus

                            Glad it works. Curve smoothing is a life safer for downloaded STLs. Those files are often low res because of size.

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                            • Phaedruxundefined
                              Phaedrux Moderator
                              last edited by

                              I'll have to try out curve smoothing in super slicer. I use the high quality preset in Fusion360 but I still see some STL facet artifacts.

                              Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

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