I’ll sell the printer before I spend money on simplify 3d.
Ive had my creator pro for just over 10 months and ive changed a few things, I only use abs not pla and print on a glass bed, I use 1/4" borosilicate glass with the gold kapton tape on that also I use a acetone and abs filament mix to make a sort of glue, prints always stick and have a nice finish on the bottom Abs print temp 220-230 extruder Build plate always 105 c Im using the makerbot software and I print between .20-.25 layer thickness First layer print speed 30mm/s rest of layers between 60-90 I would highly recommended getting a glass build plate as I had the same problems with prints not sticking, or being unreliable. Blue painters tape is garbage
I’ll buy it if you’re serious.
Did you use the GPX plugin after you process your gcode in Cura or slic3r? GitHub - whpthomas/GPX: Gcode to x3g conversion post processor 2, this runs from a command line and is pretty simple
You didn’t mention if you also cleaned it. Releveling is important, but cleaning just as well. I have the dreamer, with the same blue sticky pad I think you mention. Every 3-4 prints I wipe it down with isopropylalcohol to clean it off. The one time I couldn’t be bothered, by print 5-6 or so, it just fell off. Relevel and clean, best I can suggest.
Hi guys - ive had a successful day! I realised that my bed levelling was wrong - I was levelling it so the nozzles were off the paper, rather than just scraping it. This simple change made a huge difference!
The other BIG change was to slow the speeds down - so my Feedrate mm/s was 41, I changed it to 30, and my Travel Feedrate was 56 so I changed that to 36. The first layer or two go down real nice, and then once I see its working I speed it up a touch in the menu settings and its been fantastic.
Really looking forward to getting the glass bed kit that I ordered today as I had ABS turn up in the post!
Ill look into Simplify3D as so many have recommended it!
Just reading through these comments shows me how knowledgeable and kind everyone is, I really appreciate all your comment! Biggest lesson of the day is to eat breakfast. My brain doesnt work without food!
Cheers again
Hey, glad to see you have it working better now.
If it helps at all, I have a set routine that I have used for the last dozen or so prints that seems to work like a charm for consistent adhesion as well as good, easy release using the blue 3M pad. This is using ABS by the way.
Before every print, I take a paper towel and dab some isopropyl rubbing isopropyl alcohol (70% alchohol type) and give the blue pad a nice rub down. If there are any remnants of plastic on the pad I also take a dab of pure acetone on a paper towel and clean it off. Then next I take a new paper towel and give it four or five squirts of “Garnier Fructis” hairspray (“ultra-strong” hold level “4”) and wipe down the pad. Now I do both of these steps when the pad is cold. After that I start the pre-heating sequence. Within a few seconds of the pre-heating, I take the paper towel, give it another four or fives squirts, then dab the area where the print will be going…making sure to leave more hairspray down than soak it up.
After all of that is done and pre-heating is complete, I’ll start the print. I take some tweezers and pluck any remaining plastic from the nozzle just before it gets ready to print just in case. The prints lay down nice and stick right away. Depending on the scale of the print I will sometimes open the front door and add some cooling using a small fan from about two feet away.
Once the print is done, I take a fine edge scrapper and tap firmly at the base of the print while holding it steady with the other hand. After a few taps the prints just pop off the pad…no fuss no muss!
Anyways, I hope this helps you out some. I learned the hard way about the best methods to adhere to the blue mat. Before I figured out this method, I ruined the pad that came when it shipped after 4 or 5 prints because I tried using ABS “juice” to coat the pad. Even with a super thin coating, when I pulled the print up, it took half the blue pad with it…haha!
Good printing!
How do you set the first layers to go slower? I cant seem to find any speed settings in RepG
hey buddy, try a different slicer like Cura. Also helps to try some hairspray on your printer bed for extra adhesion.
Hey, Sorry to hear you’re having problems. I run a FlashForge Dreamer and get consistent prints. I found for the best success it first comes down to making sure your bed is level but with the correct amount of clearance for the nozzles.
I use the calibrate feature and take a piece of printer paper and slide it back and forth while adjusting the bed until a noise can be heard from the paper dragging. I normally try to level my bed off two or three times right in a row to make sure they are all adjusted. Too tight and it won’t apply right, too loose and the prints won’t stick either. Once you’re sure the bed is adjusted correctly. You can use two different techniques. My favorite for PLA is blue painters tape and hair spray. I don’t recommend heating the bed at all. I used a heated bed with hairspray and PLA and could barely get my prints off the bed! For ABS blue painters tape and a heated bed is required. ABS is much harder to get to stick without warping. I now print mostly with just PLA on a glass bed. The glass is nice as you can clean and prep it outside of your machine. I use 70 heated bed and just hairspray and it gives great prints!
Don’t give up, the Creator Pro is a great printer, I would double check the bed has the correct clearance, then try to run PLA with painters tape and hairspray. Also, I would run FlashForge Print software. I use Simplify3D and it is fantastic and worth the money.
Hi Josh,
First of all, I am really sorry to hear your bad experience with the said printer I hope the following suggestions would help.
1. Take a break, like about an hour or more just to cool your self down, this helps believe me I’ve been there.
2. Buy glass plate that fits your heating bed, you can get this from picture frames.
3. As for the spacer you may buy it online, or as long as the spacer you are placing is as thick as your glass plate anything would do as long as it fits at the back of the zed axis, there are a lot of instructional video online to show where to put the spacer.
4. Use adhesive to print straight to glass, like hairspray. Spray on the glass at least 3 coats while glass is cold.
5. I use silicon tape to keep the glass from sliding but if it is not available to you, you may use clips, just make sure it is not located where the extruder nozzle travels.
6. Re level your build plate, I know it is frustrating but since you installed a glass plate, there is no way around it.
7. Preheat build plate to 110 C and Nozzle to 230C , wait for at least five minutes, then hit print.
8. Do not remove the printed object right after printing, you have to allow it to cool down to room temperature. You may hit the bottom of your printed object with a chisel if it does not come off.
Hope this solves your problem. I have the same printer but with a glass build plate, it works fine, but my problem right now is the opposite of yours, since I am having problems in removing the printed objects. Good luck and don’t give up.
Experiment with raft to see if you get that to stick as a base.
How much are you offering? I need something practical and this printer just isn’t meeting the needs I have. I’ve got way too much money and time invested in this to invest anymore. I’d rather sell it and recoup the losses. I still owe some money on the printer so that is a major factor for me. If you’re interested send me an email directly, eragon9199@hotmail.com
I could have swore when I bought mine it came with pla not abs…also it looks like you are printing to hot and that would explain printing with abs settings and using pla which would come out hot and stringy. I would check into this as it even said in my manual it was pla.Either way it looks like a temp problem for what ever you are printing with.