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Nov 2014

Hi all,

I’m a Ultimaker2 owner and i always used CURA as slicer for my printings because of it’s easy to use interface. But i wonder if changing the slicing software I could improve my printing quality. The fact is, I know that there are a lot of different slicers on the market and i would like to know about you experiences?

Best Regards

Helder L. Santos

  • created

    Nov '14
  • last reply

    Aug '15
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Cura is a good soft and I use it for most of my prints, but sometime I’m using slic3r, to change the infill mode, the honeycomb infill got a realy good effect with transparent plastic
I’ve also try netfabb, powerfull but it’s not so freindly, perhaps my taste

Hi Eddy,

Have you ever tried to print the same *.stl, with different slice engines using same parameters? Are the results different?

I think this is the kind of tests we must do to understand better the FDM tecnology.

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3 months later

How does this work, most available printer hotends are 0.5mm in diameter. You can not print features that are smaller than that. So I think that setting in slicer is just changing the accelerations within your reprap.You are having oozing problems because slic3r calculates the feed rate/force to match what would be for a 0.1mm extruder nozzle, which aren’t available currently (smallest is about 0.28mm). If you match them correctly you won’t have issues with oozing. Play with the accelerations within the slic3r and the interface your are using to match the capabilities of your printer (that’s based on how heavy your overall reprap machine is and how bulky your extruder body assembly is). If your extruder is pretty heavy relative to the weight of your reprap printer, adjust your accelerations (a bit less than 2000 mm/s^2 is good). Print speed will decrease a bit but overall print quality will improve. I hope that helps.