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Nov 2015

Sorry for the bad picture quality.

I’ve recently started getting these bumbs on my prints. Seems to be happening the most on non overhanging top surfaces.

I am using a lulzbot Taz 5

Print bed at 110C

Nozzle temp at 235C

50mms print speeds.

40C enclosure

IC3D filament

Am I extruding to cold? Seems to be slightly (only slightly) better when I put the nozzle temp up to 240C. Bad filament?

I Should also note that it seems to be worse on long passes. In other words, small parts being printed that only extrude a little bit here and there dont seem to be showing signs of this. However when I print something like the imperial star destroyer at 10" and the nozzle literally extrudes in a straight line for 10 inches… this issues shows up.

Thanks for any help.

  • created

    Nov '15
  • last reply

    Mar '17
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It looks like over extrusion. Check the diameter of your filament, 3mm filament should measure about 2.85. There is a setting in your slicer to set the actual filament diameter. I’m guessing that your filament is actually a little wider on average so you are over extruding. You will need to check the diameter in several spaces.

Another option would be your retraction amount is too much, causing the extruder to sit in one place for a moment to retract the filament.

If it is one bump per Z Axis level, then check your retraction. If it is random, check your filament diameter.

Happy printing fellow Taz user.

Is there any chance the filament has been in a humid environment? It does tend to absorb water and that can cause snapping and popping (when steam bubbles out of the extruder). It could also cause these bumps during the extrusion. You likely wouldn’t notice in short print segments since the retraction pumps filament in and out and works out the bubbles. It does look like you’re over-extruding slightly (I see some bulges at the edge and corners) but that wouldn’t be a recent change like you mention. If you have a fresh pack of filament in the sealed bag, you could run a comparison print, or you can try drying it in a low oven (well below the glass temp for either PLA, ~60C or ABS ~80C), or some folks claim the refrigerator works too (it is quite dry).

Has your filament absorbed moisture from the air? This can cause little bumps, when steam builds up and makes the extruder pressure irregular.

It’s hard to be 100 percent certain but it does seem like it’s one bump per level. I have just been using the standard 1 mm retract at a speed of 10 mm/s with good results up untill now. I did slow down travel speed on a recent print and it made the bumps worse (i was hoping it might make them better) These bumps aren’t present on vertical walls. Is just when I do angled roofs/walls that they start to get bad. Maybe the oozing from the retracts just isn’t as visible on a vertical wall? I don’t get strings so I never assumed oozing as a problem. Although I do get marks on the top of my print. I tried upping the Z hop with little effect. So it must be oozing… Bad filament could always be a problem… I do normally hear popping noises on occasion, especially at the start of a print. However this latest print was a bag opened from factory sealed merely hours before. Had the same problems. There is always the option IC3D has crap filament. I went with them because they seemed to have the best reviews. I’m new enough that I haven’t tried anything else. Not sure about over extrusion. My measurements of the filament diameter are anywhere from 2.88 to 3.1 so I have tried to average them around 2.95… I guess I could try upping it to 3.0 diameter on cura.

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