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Nov 2015

Reverse what Steve says regarding the oil… Canola burns at 205 c while OO burns at 271 c so in this printer Olive Oil would be greatly preferred as you are unable to reach the temperatures safely to burn OO. You can easily reach the temps that would burn Canola. Mineral oil burns at 320 c and would be best, but most often is not available in a standard household. I consider my household a working one, with tons and tons of development equipment and I have exactly zero bottles of mineral oil on hand.

After reading your edit, the issue points to your bed being incorrectly set. If you can extrude properly to the waste bin then and not when printing, then the issue is your bed height in relation to the tip. There are several videos on youtube on leveling your bed properly. I have tried all methods, including a machinists dial and the paper method and dialing in the screws is the only way to fly. It will take you a half hour+ to get the bed level properly and this is the most important aspect. Using this method I can get my bed within .02 variation between the test positions and my prints, well are spot on.

I respectfully disagree. All references I have found comparing oils show Olive oil smoke point at 193°C or lower. Canola at 204°C.

And I know of my own experience with a cooking pan. Olive oil is very easy to burn. Canola has a little more margin for error.

Steve

I am not arguing. I am presenting an opposing view supported by different data and personal experience with cooking oils (EVOO). Your original post made no distinction, it simply said “olive”. You are revising your recommendations with every post. You are also suggesting 240°C when printing PLA.

Let’s focus on helping the OP.

I am referencing 240 degrees as the point at which the printer itself can no longer safely handle the temperatures and begins to break down. This printer uses a PTFE lined tube inside of the hot end and temperatures above 240 are not safe to print with. That is the exact statement I made and the only revision was to correct the Avocado Oil vs OO oil, which I even pointed out. I have this printer and use it on a daily basis, have hundreds of hours logged on it and just finished a 15 part, 66 hour print run. My response was to assist the OP and not to argue with someone else regarding oil temps and smoke points, hence the link to the location where the oil smoke points are, to allow OP to choose for himself based on the oil he has on hand.

As for personal experience with cooking oils, so what? I have a culinary arts degree from Schoolcraft College in Michigan, in addition to thousands of hours in a commercial kitchen. You did not see me mention this at all, nor did I point it out a second time trying to make myself look good. OO, VOO, EVOO are actually different oils and made with varying degrees of raw olives in the oil. The process differs in the harvesting of these oils as well, some being heated and others being pressed. Olive Oil (OO), “the yellow stuff”, the only oil that is actually used for frying, is what I referenced and allows you to go to 242 degrees before burning. Extra Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO), “the green stuff”, is used for salads an dressings, Virgin Olive Oil (VOO) is a usually blended version of the EVOO and OO and so can handle slightly higher temps. These are the reasons that the smoke points differ, frying with EVOO is highly carcinogenic and is one of the first things you are taught. Anyone who has “personal” knowledge of cooking oils would have caught this, but again, we are not arguing are we?

OP, Have a great day and hope you get it sorted.

Hello

so after tweaking the bed level again a bit lower now and used olive oil( we didint have anything else at the moment to lubricate the filament it went pretty okey. I started printing the filter but bequase it has a small surface it came loose. So i tried another stronger hairspray but that didint stick either and now my normal hairspray wont stick either i tried calibrating the bed diffrent and diffrent temperures. Is it maby the olive oil?

greetings sieuwe

and already many thanks for all the help i appreciate it.

You will have to extrude some filament in order to push all the oil through. I would say 100-200mm would suffice, but you may need a bit more or less depending on how much is there. Make sure to clean the bed thoroughly afterwards and prior to printing. Then lay down your layer of Also, wipe down the hotend as well to make sure there is no residue there.

I found the video I watched to learn how to tune my printer bed, this is the best video I have found if you can deal with his accent :slight_smile: XYZ DaVinci 1 0A with Repetier 0.92 Bed Leveling technique - YouTube 17 he uses Repetier like I do, but the results are the same for official firmware.

Hello

after changing the bedheight again and buying a diffrent haispray brand it works. Everything works as new so thank you all for helping.

greetings sieuwe

Very good to hear. Da Vinci bed height issue strikes again. Mine has the unfortunate feature of an incorrect offset between the metal contact points and the glass. Calibration gets the bed level, but the height is WAY off.

I’ve given up on the calibration routine. I just use the paper method. Works pretty well.

Happy printing.

Steve