It looks like your printbed is way too far away from the nozzle when printing the first layer, try to adjust it! Also don’t use a raft, just a brim if needed at all. You can also play around with the extrusion multiplier for the first layer. Play around with those variables to find the best settings for your printer. Cheers, Marius Breuer
thats what doesnt make sense, i adjust my printbed with a sheet of paper like i always have, i print a test cube of either 5mm-10mm, and it is either dead on, or very close, say 4.95mm cubed. This was printed without a raft, and just using a brim with 0 distance from the object. How do i adjust the setting for just the 1st layer? I am using slic3r.
I had a similar problem with slic3r, my solution was to use a older version of Cura.
Hello, I think the distance between the extruder and the plate is too big for your first layer.
Check the documentation of your printer to adjust the 0 level of the Z Axis.
Shifted layers, means a few things,
1. Either your belt tension is too tight/too slack, hence causing the y axis to skip steps.
2. Your rods are not sufficiently greased.
3. Your y axis stepper motor has overheated, or your stepper drive chip has overheated, you have to ventilate it.
4. Your filament feeding is being hindered, has too much tension hence pulling the print head backwards along the y axis, or your spool was hindered momentarily by some avoidable circumstances.
To be honest, you have to check which direction it shifted in before you take off the print from the bed, and then analyze what could have cause the layer shift. I have had quite a bit of troubleshooting to do when I encountered layer shiftings.
Check your retract settings. If there is a slight curling at the edges of your print (more prominent when printing overhangs without support), then your nozzle may be catching on a cooled lip whilst travelling across to print a new area. I found that increasing the z travel on retractions to around 0.5 mm rather than 0.2, this stopped happening. (This is assuming you didn’t change your acceleration or travel feed rates of course).
When your bottom layers were freeflow, your wouldn’t have had any tiny areas of over extrusion etc. so there would have been less to catch the nozzle on.