That makes sense, thanks! I have been recently testing the Marvin stl with various settings to try and get a good quality print.
If the layer height is set to 0.09mm and a maximum infill, then wouldn’t printing the raft be overkill since the model is being printed with a high degree of stability?
The Marvin part has a slow steady curve from bottom-to-top. I can see why maybe a raft here would not be useful. But, maybe you have an opinion on this.
I guess I’m just wondering how the overhanging material cools after it’s been printed. If the infill is maxed, then the outer surface will presumably “stick” to the inner material, so I couldn’t imagine many aberrations in the topology of the surface?
this blurry gif is what I meant by “depressing the plate”. More like pinching it together, this relieves the pressure on the thumb screw and you should be able to completely unscrew the thumb nut. If that’s possible it means you can use this way (temporarily) with gloves during the calibration to move the thumb screw up and down.
Worst case scenario is that you cannot pinch the plate down as the screw is fully compressed already.
It is helpful to know there are two different types of burn marks. I turned the Marvin to face the fan and I still got the same burn mark in the top-left corner of Marvin’s face.
The Print Settings are:
0.09mm, Infill Max, Support 0%, Fan 100
The burn mark is more noticeable when the Infill is set to Maximum. Given that information, I am guessing it is the accumulated junk?
I guess I don’t really know how much of an effect the Infill has on the model’s integrity, just beyond the obvious. I set it to Max or High because I think the print will be the best quality. Would love to know your opinion.
Depressing the front plate (pinching it) did the trick! Thank you!
I had to dissemble the front thumb screw to see how it works. Once I saw it was just a few pieces, I figured out how tightening and loosening would work if you depress the plate because it creates a gap for the thumb screw to travel more freely up and down.
Cheers for that!
Did you happen to see my last comment? I have been trying to resolve the burn mark.
I checked out your hub. Did you take your printer offline? You’re in Honkers! That’s cool. I love Hong Kong.
My hub is @3DMuse based in Germany, that’s another James
Glad that worked. I can tell you, you’re not the only one with the thumb screw problem. I’ve read about it quite a few times online, lucky the pinching trick works for me.
I still havn’t solved the burn mark on my machine, I find it pretty annoying too especially on white. This is the area where we as users have little control of, I would be interested in seeing what the guys at support have to say about this. Usually I pause the print midway and wipe the nozzle using some folded aluminum foil or steel wool to keep the prints clean. Hope they can fix it either through Z-Suite, Firmware or filament.
You have the same burn problem issue? Okay. Sorry that is happening to you too, but it makes me feel better knowing it is out of my control.
What’s strange about the burn mark, though, is that it is always in the same place! No matter where the face of the Marvin is orientated (towards the fan or away from the fan), the burn mark is in the exact same location. What’s more, I printed two Marvin’s, and again, the same burn mark in the same location.
This to me means that something screwy is going on with the model.