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Jun 2016

It may be cooling to fast. Try taking a card board box and putting it over the printer while printing.

You could try to add a brim to the print, and the adhesion to the bed is probably not good enough, use a glue stick or hairspray (if it’s glass)

more infill will cause more warping (shrinking material) just keep it at 20%-25%.

I print PLA a lot, without a heated bed and on tape, warping is minimal.

maybe it’s just not so good quality PLA ?, maybe try another roll ?

Actually PLA is not tend to wrap in printing,Maybe you could print with bigger raft,So the bottom could stick to the hot bed.

You can also check your fan speed, I personally don’t use the extruder fan to cool my prints and I haven’t had any warping since. I have also however also changed my print bed material to glass and included a raft of about 5 lines to each print.

This can simply be prevented I found by the following method

PLA run about 215, bed 20 (basically cold) cooling on pla is essential as well.

bed prep either masking tape, blue with some elmers extreme gluestick lightly applied or use buildtak, or double sided kapton tape.

Also try to run your first layers nice and slow and make sure the settings reflect real life ie initial layer heights are the same as software etc.

but out typically just run slow with cooling on.

my two cents. Regards Dabe

Hi,

When I get very bad warping like that and solutions like glue or tape won’t work anymore, I just completely deactivate the FAN of the extruder that points on the print and add a good brim. This way the heat of the plastic will cool down much more gradually and will stop most of the warping.
Considering the shape of the 3D print in the picture this probably won’t be a problem for the print quality.

I hope this will help :slight_smile:

18 days later

So, I was finally able to get my part to stop warping! It turns out, my problem was not that the print was cooling too quickly, but that it wasn’t cooling quickly enough! Once I lowered the heated bed temperature, things started to print straight. Essentially, what I think was happening was that the bottom layers that were in contact with the heated bed weren’t sufficiently cool by the time the middle layers were cooling. So, as the middle layers were cooling, they wanted to contract, and since the bottom layers were still fairly warm and malleable, they easily went with the contraction. By lowering the heated bed temperature, those bottom layers solidify more quickly and are less malleable and can better resist the tendency to warp. Chalk up another one for counter-intuitive solutions!

3 years later

@Nickolai,

Thank you, I can confirm as I had same experience. Most website recommend a build plate temperature of 70 degrees and till now I always used this temperature. But on my latest project (an large RC plane with thin walls) I had a lot of warping and I’ve spilled 1kg of PLA on it and a lot of time. I’ve lowered the build plate temperature to 30 degrees and now the print is finally ok. I think it’s because I currently print larger opjects so the nozzle needs to travel a longer distance.

Edit; unfortunatly the problem still persist. It starts warping and pulls even the brim from the build plate. Fan is off as well ;-(

Edit2; I think I’ve found it :slight_smile: Recalibrated the Z-height using piece of paper (even the first layer looked perfect) but instead of using 0.1mm difference I’ve used 0.15 (tenth of a mm) to get closer to the build plate and now it seems like it’s sticking nice and not warping anymore. Still using a brim and temperature of the build plate a bit higher to 50 degrees. Temperature of the PLA is 190 degrees and I’m using a glass build plate and to stick hairspray.