i changed the filament then and surprisingly there was a little piece of filament left behind from testing in the filament guid tube. i got it out and thought that this was the problem but my prints didn't get better.
sometimes the prints are "ok" and sometimes so bad that if have to cancel the job during printing. if i mean "ok" then the prints finished but its far from a good part. really thin extrusion of filament. or the printer changing flowrate during printing like in this pictures:
thick and thin walls an the first layer of the raft! common whats this?
more pictures of "ugly" printing:
sometimes i have also this clicking noise the extruder is making.. normally when this appears i can stop the printing because there won't be a lots of filament coming out of the extruder.
i believe that my (not so ) smart extruder doesn't extrude enough filament.
anyone has the same issues? is there something i can do? like unload and reload filament the whole day? i'm frustrated with my 3000 $ bad printing machine!!
and who ist printing without problems? do you have some pictures to share?
.... so far printed good (i mean until the end as you can see above):
Patrick,
I just wanted to let you know that I checked in with our support staff about this. We see that you have a new case open with Josh - he's going to e-mail you today, so please keep an eye out for his response.
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If anything... I would argue that the cooling fan on the 5th gen is too effective... potentially causing the filament to solidify during aggressive retraction and plugging the entrance to the thermal barrier...Since the nozzle seems to be raised and lowered by the action of the filament retracting and then extruding... the first sign of a clog forming would be that the nozzle 'sticks' in the up (or down) position.My suggestion would be to reduce the airflow, thereby increasing the temperature of the thermal barrier in order to avoid the plug forming.Without actually having one to experiment on... and zero intention of buying a 5th gen at present... one theory is as plausible as the next! :-)
Try canola oil yet?
I haven't read the merger paperwork myself but that's what I heard.
Just so that there is some balance to this thread . . . I have successfully printed many items with my 5th Gen. I have attached a picture of many of the items I have printed. I do agree that not everything is perfect with the printer; I am particularly disappointed that the wireless printing option is not available yet.
I just want to be sure that people know that at least one of the 5th Gens out there works. So the answer to the original poster's question is: Yes, people (at least one person anyway) do print usable parts with their 5th Gen printer.
PatrickThose look like classic 'air prints'....the 5th gen's 'smart extruder' was touted as the end of those. (wry smile)
Could be several reasons for it...at least on a 4th gen.If you get knocking when it's printing a raft that usually means the build plate is too close to extruder head. The filament is backing up because it can't flow.Might be heat soak....where the heat is slowly rising up the extruder stack and the filament gets soft...which allows the drive wheel to skip (knocking)...which leads to it not feeding enough. *(this is my best guess for prints that fail after starting well)If it was a 4th gen it might be the filament was too big or too small...that would fool the system into extruding too big or too small a bead...BUT...if you're using the new MBI filament rolls it should be close.There's just not enough info out for the 5th gens yet....Have you called MBI and had them weigh in on it?Cheers
Jay
-Patrick
Then, returning to an older firmware that at least screams at you the machine didn't home properly, so you know to abort and try again produces better prints?
Pure rocket science I tell you.
I got my replicator 5th gen last week. first i printed some nearly good parts... then i an into some strange problems. the parts suddenly got really worse during or in the end of printing. see pictures:
I will have my 5th gen unboxing tomorrow. What color filament would you suggest for first attempts? I have red, yellow, natural, black and true white. I know to avoid the black. Maybe the red (makerbot) for starters?
The fact that the part is made of plastic is not likely an issue, because the injection molded parts are high-temp PC-ABS plastic and that part is above the finned thermal barrier where everything is supposed to be fairly cool. But it's very possible that the hole is too small.