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Aug 2016

So i bought my self a flashforge finder about 5 days ago and its been amazing!

However, I have one issue, every so often some of my prints will come out with warping on the corners.

Now i have looked on the internet for solutions however, some people say to get a heated bed others say to use tape or even glue.

Anyone got any ideas?

  • created

    Aug '16
  • last reply

    Sep '18
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Hi Hende, try a heated bed of at least 50C to start, with Kapton tape. Others have posted about this, so search the talk section for other recommendations as well (especially involving bed adhesion.)

Cheers,

-Kent

If you are using pla I like to use blue painters tape. It helps it stick well to the cold bed. What temperature and color filament are you using?

Hi, The solution is One of This two or both:

1. Calibrate the level, don’t just trust the auto leveling.

2. Take 1 part glue for wood and 4 part water. Mix and distribut with a pencil and let it dry out.

I have had lots of problem like this, tried glue and everything. But since leveling I don’t even need the glue

I also have Flash forge Finder and heated bed is not an option for it so you have to stick with either Blue Tape or add a raft in each print. I personally use Raft for each prints due to 2 reasons, first it prevents warping (almost 98% of my prints are successful, one 1 or 2 prints face warping). and secondly I get smooth surface underneath my prints. So overall spending a little extra filament for rafts or brims will help you a lot.

Rafts get remove easily but sometime it doesn’t so I use X-Acto Knife to remove the raft and smooth out the items through sanding.

I would try turning down the fan, or I have heard some people use an epoxy glue, you could research that but I haven’t tried it before

6 months later

There is one awesome solution to solve the warping issue in any printer. For FF Finder, take out the build plate and invert it to expose the glass side. Put carpenter’s tape on it. Print a raft on top of it. Pause the printing. Put some quick glue on the corners of your print. Let it dry. Once it dries corners will adhere to the tape. Tape is already adhered to the smooth glass bottom. Now resume to print. It should print nicely. I tried and got 100 % results with 4 big prints of around 13cm X 13cm dimension.

2 years later

I did almost what Abhishek suggested…I flipped the glass over and covered it with blue painters tape. I elected to try without using the glue and have had no issues so far. Just need to remember to change the tape once every couple of builds.