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Jul 2015

The looks of the photo indicate to hot of a nozzle temperature. A very glossy finish is the clue, while a cooler temperature will produce a matte like luster. Are you printing with a third filament cooling fan? Also, I printed my Marvin at 20mm/sec, if I remember. Low slow and plenty of cooling of using pla, same with abs but omit cooling fan until the key chain ring.

Also, you should be using sailfish 7.7. All other firmware has been abandoned long long long ago

Are you printing with PLA or ABS? You are correct the print should not just fail at the end. When I have trouble like this on smaller details I tell my print job at to slow down at the layer I’m having issues with. What you could try to do is print at your highest resolution and look for a setting to change the # of mm/s print speed. That’s my only suggestion at this point.

I’ve done several printer upgrades after getting the CTC. It now prints very well with not too many hiccups any longer.

I’ve been trying to get Sailfish for a couple of days, when I try and change the update URL in replocatorg I just get a network not available message. Any tips?

You are using the wrong version of repG. I think the correct version is r30. Get the newest from thingiverse.

Done! Thanks for the advice, first sailfish print underway now!

What temp did you use and do you have an internal screw type thermocouple or external tap style? Looks like some kind of replicator type machine in the background. That marvin actually looks really really hot, you should use the lowest temp you can get away with. Marius is right, you should print multiple marvins or even put a simple tower next to whatever you print so that marvin gets time to cool. I’m not sure if speeding up the print would improve your results, I think you’d actually want to decrease the speed or increase the minimum layer duration so that the layers have time to cool. I think that plus printing multiple marvins or other objects at the same time and using a cooling fan will improve your results dramatically. If you don’t have a cooling fan just point a regular household fan at it for now.

Also, when you get a fan, something like this Active Cooling Fan Duct for Replicator 1 / Duplicator 4 / FlashForge by thruit00 - Thingiverse won’t make that big of a difference if any because all that ducting lowers the airflow way too much, as axial fans are not made for ducting. Soon as you add ducting, especially tiny thin ducting you lose all the horsepower so to speak. An axial fan would work way better with a high flow duct such as Cooling fan hanger for FlashForge Creator 3D printer by Harh - Thingiverse. A centrifugal (also called squirrel cage) fan works dramatically better than an axial fan. I’m going to upgrade mine to a centrifugal fan soon.

I remember I used to have horrible failures that looked just like your marvin before I made numerous upgrades, and now I can’t fail a print like that if I tried.

After you remove the cover to the motherboard, you need to solder a mosfet in the empty slot:

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-mn2\_MVpXZfQ/Uq9\_DozKdAI/AAAAAAAAAAM/UPqXBQ9Nx5M/s1600/fet6.jpg .

If you’re lucky, there might already be one there I don’t know how CTC does it now.

Make sure the solder enough contact area on that tab. You can check what’s written on your existing mosfets and then search for them online. Let me know if you have trouble finding them.

Next buy a fan and connect it to the motherboard. I used slightly thicker wire for my fan to keep the power up.

Seriously though, you should save yourself the time and get rid of the PTFE liner and get all metal threaded thermal barriers and a threaded cooling bar with thermal paste on the cool part of the thermal barrier and where the heat sinks and cooling bar meet. Otherwise your prints will keep getting worse and clog a lot. You’ll have to replace the PTFE soon anyways, and while you wait for some of the ingredients in the PTFE to slowly degrade it will be putting toxic stuff into the air.

The thermal barriers have to be stepped on the inside, otherwise they won’t work. Mine are AVN Swiss’s thermal barriers + nozzles. If you get the AluDual cooling bar then you need to get slightly longer thermal barriers (not AVN Swiss) and also a replicator 2x carriage and drive mounts and you’ll have to print a bunch of spacers before you begin the mod, so I wouldn’t recommend the AluDual cooling bar.

When you install it, tighten the nozzles all the way by hand, then unscrew about a half turn to a full turn and then screw the thermal barrier in by hand all the way until it stops (Should be all the way to the heatbreak). Heat up and tighten gently until it stops to get a good seal but don’t overtighten because the thermal barriers are hard stainless steel and the heater block is soft aluminum.

Why are you using replicatorG??? When I first started I also used it and people would ask me why I’m using repG.