Bondtech or similar extruders (again)
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If everything but a benchy prints fine, the moral of the story is
"dont print a benchy"
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@preb1 said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
I have thought of that but I only print PLA and at 190 to 195 degrees. I only occasionally use cooling if it's got overhangs otherwise I find the layers don't stick together.
that seem very odd. pla does require cooling normally. does this happen with pla from other manufacturers as well?
can you post your thermistor config? you might be printing at the wrong temperature.
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Thanks for all the replies. Unfortunately I don't agree with cooling for pla. I don't find I need to cool the part. I can print a 20mm single wall cube with no cooling and I get no problems. At 30mm print speed that's just under 3 secs per layer. I always thought you print at lowest temp possible without stringing. This is why I find it hard to believe it's overtemp that's causing the finish on the benchy. Any cooling I use results in layer separation with all makes of pla even if I only use 20% or so.
My jerk is 800mm/s on x,y and z. Accel is 2000mm/s, 3000mm/s on extruder and retraction is 80mm/sec and retraction set at 2mm.
You're right, don't print a benchy but I am curious as to why I can't print them with success.
I am trying now to print 3 at once to see if there is any difference in finish. -
@preb1 said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
I can print a 20mm single wall cube with no cooling
A cube has no overhangs.
What kind of fan are you running that any cooling at all results in layer delamination?
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15x50 centrifugal fan
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But does not the cat I printed have overhangs?
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Try the benchy with the fan at 100%, and crank the temperature up to 210-215 to get rid of layer adhesion issues.
Just try it and report back -
@nitrofreak said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
Try the benchy with the fan at 100%, and crank the temperature up to 210-215 to get rid of layer adhesion issues.
Just try it and report backThis.
The fan is for bulk cooling, and the nozzle temp is for layer adhesion. The idea of using both at the same time is not an oxymoron; just consider your hotend has a massive heatsink and fan on it right next to the melt chamber. If you don't use a cooling fan for PLA the heat in the bulk print builds up too much and stays squishy. If that's making your layer adhesion suck, then your nozzle temp is too low for that particular PLA. A benchy is totally different than a single-walled cube because in the single-walled cube there's air surrounding every single line you print so the heat can dissipate naturally. With the benchy there's a lot of plastic mass not being cooled, and in addition to the heat of the newly extruded PLA you've got the hot nozzle hovering right over most of the print most of the time radiating heat onto it.
There's lots of stuff I'll print without a fan. I often print PETG with no fan, and always do my attempts with nylon and ASA and whatnot with no fan. PLA isn't one of those things; it needs the fan.
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@sethipus said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
@nitrofreak said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
Try the benchy with the fan at 100%, and crank the temperature up to 210-215 to get rid of layer adhesion issues.
Just try it and report backThis.
The fan is for bulk cooling, and the nozzle temp is for layer adhesion. The idea of using both at the same time is not an oxymoron; just consider your hotend has a massive heatsink and fan on it right next to the melt chamber. If you don't use a cooling fan for PLA the heat in the bulk print builds up too much and stays squishy. If that's making your layer adhesion suck, then your nozzle temp is too low for that particular PLA. A benchy is totally different than a single-walled cube because in the single-walled cube there's air surrounding every single line you print so the heat can dissipate naturally. With the benchy there's a lot of plastic mass not being cooled, and in addition to the heat of the newly extruded PLA you've got the hot nozzle hovering right over most of the print most of the time radiating heat onto it.
There's lots of stuff I'll print without a fan. I often print PETG with no fan, and always do my attempts with nylon and ASA and whatnot with no fan. PLA isn't one of those things; it needs the fan.
+1 on this.
See my picture below, thit is one of my PETG printers, it doesn’t print anything else but PETG. And you will notice there is NO part cooling fan because it doesn’t need one.
Some materials do need external cooling and some don’t, this conclusion is reached through extensive testing.
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@calvinx said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
See my picture below, thit is one of my PETG printers, it doesn’t print anything else but PETG. And you will notice there is NO part cooling fan because it doesn’t need one.
In my experience there is a reason for using a part cooling fan with PETG (and similar filaments) and that is when you are printing skin above support. In that situation you would like to have poor layer adhesion and so blasting 100% fan at the skin makes the support easier to remove.
I print various PETG parts and mostly use zero fan but I do have one part that has some overhang and that needs a touch of fan to avoid sagging.
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@burtoogle said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
@calvinx said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
See my picture below, thit is one of my PETG printers, it doesn’t print anything else but PETG. And you will notice there is NO part cooling fan because it doesn’t need one.
In my experience there is a reason for using a part cooling fan with PETG (and similar filaments) and that is when you are printing skin above support. In that situation you would like to have poor layer adhesion and so blasting 100% fan at the skin makes the support easier to remove.
I print various PETG parts and mostly use zero fan but I do have one part that has some overhang and that needs a touch of fan to avoid sagging.
Interesting. luckily I have not had any issue removing supports.
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Ok. Update.
Tried printing a benchy at 215 degrees and 100% fan. Set fan to come on at Layer 10 (2mm). That was the end of that . No layer stuck after that and no, my cooling outlet is not blowing at the nozzle but at the print.
I printed an overhang test piece firstly with no cooling and 195 degrees. Printed ok until about 50 degrees overhang when it got a bit messy. Then I printed it at 215 degrees and 50% fan. About the same quality but had no strength. Could pull it apart easily. I'm using Sakata 3d filament. Now going to try Rigid Ink filament.
The daft thing is that when this was a standard printer I could print a benchy no problem. Since upgrading to a genuine E3D and a Direct drive extruder I have had all these problems. I guess that is the answer. Revert to original.
As an aside my delta with a duet board and a E3D and Flexidrive extruder also prints a benchy no problem with no cooling.
It makes me think that 3D printing is not an exact science as some make it out to be. -
Do you have the correct thermistor values for the hotend?
Is there something mechanically wrong with it?
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Since you’ve changed the nozzle, are your thermistor settings correct? Looks to me like you’re printing too hot, and over extruding on the return after retraction, hence a zit. As you’re direct drive, retraction should be much shorter than Bowden. Are you using pressure advance too? Something definitely changes after the first 10 or so layers. Is this where solid fill ends and printer speeds up? Was the cat printed with the current setup, or before the change? If current, I can’t explain why it’s so different for Benchy!
Ian
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Thermistor values I think are correct. I did a PID tune and set the values. The temp is rock steady as is the bed which is mains powered heated mat.
The cat was printed with the same setup.
Not using pressure advance. 2mm retraction set up at moment.
Printer is set at 2400mm/min.
I print first layer at 40% speed as I find this gets a good first layer. The outline is set to 40% as well.
So first layer prints at 16mm/s with the outline at 6.5mm/s
Thereafter everylayer prints at 40mm/s with the outline at 16mm/s.
I chose the fan to come on after 10 layers as this seemed a good point to start. -
@preb1 said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
I chose the fan to come on after 10 layers as this seemed a good point to start.
Is this still the picture of the Benchy from the first post? Because something fairly dramatic changes at that point. Maybe the fan is causing interference on the thermistor? Or temperature change at that layer? Something about your settings is different for the Benchy from the cat.
Ian
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If it's a Gt2 Semitek from E3D your config entry for the heater should look like this on Duet Wifi.
M305 P1 T100000 B4725 C7.060000e-8 R4700 S"Hot End"
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@preb1 said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
Thermistor values I think are correct.
just let us double check that.
post the values that you configured in M305 and tell us which thermistors you are using. -
@phaedrux said in Bondtech or similar extruders (again):
Do you have the correct thermistor values for the hotend?
Is there something mechanically wrong with it?
+1 on that, 215 is usually enough for any PLA.
On another note, are you sure it´s PLA? It sounds more like the behaviour with ABS.
If you double check the thermistor and see if they´re the correct values, go up with the temperature drastically , like up to 260C and see at what temperature the layers stick with the cooling fan at 100%.
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This is config entry for thermistor.
M305 P1 T100000 B4138 C0 R4700I've just altered the cooling outlets to point more down so as not to blow across where the filament is laid down. Got a feeling they may have been cooling the filament as it was going down so maybe cooling to quickly.
Just printing a benchy now.