My Rep 2X will print the raft (HIP) and about 3 layers of the part before air printing. Post investigation it seems like heat creap is softening the material until it flattens and either doesnt grip the stepper or goes down into the nozzle and jams because it’s too wide. Raft always completes printing but then is also always jammed by the time the 3 layers of regular plastic is printed and starts air printing so I assume the HIP has then succumed to the heat creap.
Temp measurements are (using IR probe):
steppers are around 66degC after 30mins or printing (Hot! Can touch for about 4 seconds). All gantry and extruder steppers are about the same temp.
extruder spring assembly about 56degC (these are now aluminum upgrades)
mounting bar/block about 70degC
aluminum carriage (upgrade) was about 100-110degC
My first thought was that the stepper motors are contributing to the heat creep but google searches suggest 60-70degC steppers are normal. I added heat sinks to the steppers - no diff. So the nozzle heat is then creeping up the thermal barrier tube? How is this happening when it didnt before? I had original thermal barrier tubes in there when this started, but figured maybe they lost lubrication so I bought new ones…no diff. I replaced the fans (same model). I am used to replacing a lot of fans too and never had a problem before…these fans fail bearings often! Fans are currently running fast and furious (as they should). I have heat sinks and fans in proper orientation. (fan labels not visible, fan to fins.) Could the aluminum carriage be causing heat creep? I can’t see why since the the nozzles and steppers would conduct to the mounting bar regardless, so if anything the carriage would sink heat and dissipate more than conduct it. Aluminum extruder upgrade has a tight grip on the plastic - much more than old makerbot ones. Also replaced thermocouples in attempt to fix. I’ve dissassembled and reassembled the extruder about 30 times (not exaggerating!) as much of the upgrades or replacements were done 1 at a time.
Any suggestions!?!?! I am at the end of my rope.
Upgrades:
My Rep 2X was working great for a few years with the added Bottleworks mods (glass plate + aluminum arms). A few months ago it started this air-printing. So I decided to do some major upgrades to the head unit to figuring it would fix it and improve it. Upgrades include aluminum carriage & aluminum extruders, new heater blocks, nozzles and thermal barrier tubes.
Printing ABS at 230, HIPS at 250. Build plate at 110.
The printer started air printing after many good prints, wasnt after a disassembly. I have had it apart before then many times for simple maintenance. Disassembly and reassembly wasn’t anything new for me. The Rep2X as they say is an “experimental” printer, not as in “for experimenters” but as in “this printer is ‘the experiment’ and you may need to fix me often”. I’ve been very happy with it though, it’s a good printer. It’s just a Gutenburg versus a xerox. A built my own CNC mill, PCB stencil printer, reflow oven and maintain a Samsung PnP machine so not new to mechanics and maintenance by any means.
I attached a pic of the failed print now that I am an approved user.
I had the same problem with my Replicator 2, changed nozzles, heat tape, settings but it turned out that after disassembling the head to clear out a clog that I put the fan in backwards. You should not see the label if the fan is put on correctly.
I had a similar problem with jams after a few layers. Turns out I had too much retraction. Pulling the hot material up too far will increase the heat creep. I changed my retraction to 0.2 mm and got a completed part (after 8 failed ones). I have settled on 0.4 mm to reduce some of the strings that I saw in the part 0.2 mm retraction. My original was 1 mm retraction and it always jammed.
FYI I solved the heat creep issues by replacing the fans/heat-sinks with water cooling using a Koolance CPU cooling unit. Works great, mounting bar stabilizes at 43degC over hours of printing. More info at: