Had some really good prints recently up until a couple of days ago when it appears to start shifting ever so slightly as you can see in the photo. The shifts don’t appear at the same height on any print, it seems quite random. Its also a shift either to the right or the left upon the x axis. I use a glass plate but that is secure, the belts have a regular good tension, the bolts are tight and the z rods are all straight, bed is levelled regularly. I’m not sure what else to try to look at to fix this issue. Any ideas very welcome.
Are your spools still mounted on the rear? That cause way too much friction with mine even with PTFE guide tubes (our extruder stepper motors are fairly underdriven current-wise), I made mountings that put the spools above the printer feeding straight down and got rid of issues like that (and jumped up to happily printing at 120mm/s instead of 60)
Haven’t had this issue before and spool is on the side (centre of the holder is attached to the top). Spool is where its pretty much always been, partly why I don’t understand this new issue.
I had a problem problem like this, for me it was a continuous shift to the left of the x axis. Sometimes it was better and sometimes worse, printing speed had a small influence (slow speed = less leaning to the left), but I couldn’t get rid of the shift totally. I checked everything with the machanics, disassembled and reassembled everything. I switched the x/y steppers and even the stepper drivers boards. I replaced the x stepper wires and used a cable chain. I searched the Internet for a solution but sadly found only some posts like this with no answer in the end.
additional filtering can only work in same cases and even a change in cable length can make this not working. I would suggest to switching the cables for shielded ones, but where should the shield be connected to?
For me the following solution worked: reroute the stepper cable inside a cable chain coming from the back of the case. And route the endstop cable from the front (where LCD is sitting).