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I realised while driving home from the space yesterday that the temperature sensor setting in the configuration.h is wrong, it is set to 7 but should be set to 1. Without the hotend temperature being regulated correctly the extruder performance can’t be correctly measured. We need to fix that problem and then re-test the extruder performance, and workout the maximum reliable extruder speed. Using that as a benchmark we can calculate expected maximum printing speeds.
The blobbing on layer change issue may be resolved by increasing the retraction distance, not just speed. But looking at the photos of the models it appears that the general filament flow rate may need to be adjusted. The flow rate settings for high speed printing may need to be a little different from the slow speed settings, and of course, only once the flow rate has been correctly calibrated can the retraction be correctly calibrated.
The other issue that is apparent from the photos is the cooling settings in Slic3r need attention. High speed printing on small layers will cause problems that need to be compensated for, but again anything to do with the hot end temperature needs be dealt with once we have corrected the temperature sensor settings, and adjusted the PID values.
Trystan, what time are you planning on getting to the space, I’d also like to get these issues sorted early?
Rob.
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I finish work at 2:30PM today so should be at the space probably around 3:00PM. I can change the temperature sensor setting easily enough and rerun the PID auto-tune to get the correct values for that.
I agree that the flow rate needs to be adjusted as there is visible gaps in the external fills, whether this is a result of this particular filament, is unknown though. The increase in retraction distance I believe was part of the issue due to the slower retraction speed, but increasing it further will possibly help the issue due to the higher retraction speed. But this is something you'll need to judge as I'm not experienced enough.
What time do you expect to be able to get to the space today?
-Trystan
I'm inclined to agree that in normal prints, the speeds should be kept down to ensure reliability of the printers or at least until the new speeds can be demonstrated to be robust and reliable at.
The Frankencake prints well, but it does do it slower than the Prusa works at normally. If we could get similar printing speeds/times from both, that could be useful. But I'm not in a position to make that call, only give my opinion.
-Trystan
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Stuart,
I agree with what you are saying about heat and the need for a cooling fan for the extruder. However, the testing we did on Saturday showed that the extruder is capable of running at least twice as fast as we need it to for the printing speeds we were testing at before there is any issue with its ability to feed the filament. Also, during our testing the filament was being chewed well before the motor power and gearbox limits were reached, and that was without the temperature being correctly set.
I think that getting the firmware and slicing software configuration well-tuned and adding a fan to the extruder should be enough to get the printer working well at a range of speeds without needing to re-design the extruder. The only other change I would make is to add a cooling fan for the extruded filament as well as one for the extruder.
I agree that in a lot of cases high printing speeds are not appropriate, and I wouldn’t suggest that everyone tries to print everything at 150mm/s. The original Slic3r configuration set to 40mm/s is still there and we have added another optional configuration that we were using for testing at 150mm/s. I would expect that a range of speeds should be used depending on the requirements of each actual print job.
I often use high speeds, thick layers and low fill to print a quick rough draft of a design, in say 20 minutes while I’m tweaking it, and then re-print at a lower speed, higher fill and lower layers for my final print that then takes 4 hours for the same model. As John says “if something is important print it slowly”. If you just want to print a cat to see a 3d printer in action then maybe trying faster speeds might be acceptable.
The purpose of the testing we are doing is to find what the maximums are that the printer is capable of and the set those maximums in the printers firmware so that if someone tries to go beyond them the firmware will ignore the instructions that it can’t handle and only operate in a workable range, not to do all printing at high speed from now on.
From: connected-commu...@googlegroups.com [mailto:connected-commu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of John Bosua
Sent: Monday, 6 May 2013 9:42 AM
To: connected-commu...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [CCHS] Prusa Mendel's Firmware update and Calibration
My 2 cents worth . As an experienced 3d print person, printing fast always creates bad models!! if something is important print it slowly.