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Feb 2015

Awesome. Now I know how to get the tricky end part of Marvin printed perfectly.

The axis in your printer need lubricating, the recommended substance is “sewing machine oil”.

Now, where to get that, and is it really the right oil?

The idea is that the oil must not attack any of the materials in your printer,

and STAY FLUID for a long time.

These requirements are met by Ballistol. It is a multipurpose lubricant which in Norway

is sold in weapons shops. The gun geeks use it to preserve the action. One guy told me he had oiled his gun and put it away in his safe for 15 years. After taking it out, it was like yesterday’s oil!
It is easy to find in Europe, you can also look it up on the web.

I use it personally when restoring sliders in old synthesizers, which have been treated with absolutely

the wrong material in Japan and USA long ago. The wrong oil has turned into vax… or cheese.

USE VERY SPARINGLY:

Do not spray into your printer. You do not want it on the belts (they wont break, on the contrary, but they will get slippery, and you really do not want that), you only want oil on the axis.

Spray 1 sec into a piece of kleenex or similar. Wipe onto all the axis.

After next prints there will be forming a little ring of dust and excess oil at the axis endpoints, wipe it with paper or cotton.

You will have perfectly lubricated axis!

Repeat after 3-6 months.

Hello,

For Flex PLA the limit temperature written on the reel is 220°, here you say 230°. Which is right ? I sort of have problems with Flex PLA…

There is a cable chain for the UMO too:

These are general guidelines! The optimal temp varies 5-10C even

within same make, just by change of color!

No. I print with Nylon occasionally which absorbs water very badly and it boils as it prints. You can hear it snap/crackle/pop/hiss as it comes out and you can see the plastic is foamier and whiter (less transparent) when it is humid. I’m pretty sure water content won’t cause clogs.

Simply leaving PLA or especially ABS in the nozzle for 5 minutes at 240C will caramelize it into a brown gunk. Doing a “cold pull” after every 10 hours of printing or on every filament change helps and printing PLA at say 220C rather than 240C helps quite a bit. And ABS I always print at 245C. In general printing too hot or too slow (stopped) can cause clogs. Printing too cold or too fast can cause problems feeding and underextrusion (feeder isn’t powerful enough).