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10 / 24
Jan 2019

I’m using Flashprint slicer. Here are my settings:

Base Print Speed: 50mm/s
Travel Speed: 60
Minimum Speed: 5
First Layer Maximum Speed: 20
First Layer Maximum Travel Speed: 70
Retraction Length: 1.8mm
Retraction Speed: 30mm/s

Layer Height: 0.18mm
First Layer Height: 0.27mm

Infill
Solid Speed: 65%
Sparse Speed: 65%
Fill Density: 15%

Additions
Enable Pre-extrusion: Yes
Margin: 5.0mm

Advanced
Extrusion Ratio: 109%
Path Width: 0.40mm
Path Precision: 0.10mm

Also, what height should the nozzle be from the bed? I am wondering if this could be an issue as it starts off printing good on the raft, but a few mins later is when it seems to clog and it looks as if it may be too close to the previous layer when it starts to slow down and begin clogging.

I had a few minutes before I leave to head off to work and decided to try the other white filament I had from flashforge. I tried the same test print as before (the benchy boat). The first layer goes on pretty good with the exception of the first oozing filament that gets knocked off the first trace around the raft. I noticed that when the nozzle moved across the raft to reposition to start the 2nd layer, it made a small indention in the top of each line of the rafts first layer. I leveled the bed manually using a folded over piece of white printer paper. It appears I may have the nozzle too low to the bed and maybe that’s causing my clogging issue as it keeps dragging into the already printed layers?

I’d slow a little to 40mm/s or slower for small parts. Stick with a 0.2 layer height for now.
Reduce the extrusion ratio to about 95% for PLA.

Thank you so much for the recommendations! I’m leaving for work now, but I’ll get those changed when I get home this afternoon and see what it looks like.

I have a couple rolls of solutech here that work at normal temps and just the one that will clog at normal temps. I like hatchbox. I’ve never had any problems with them. I think with solutech they have faulty rolls and you don’t know what your going to get.

Looks good.
Now, the fan issue has given you a very good example of a condition called “heat creep” usually associated with PLA filament but not limited to it. You can google to learn more but the basics are this:
Heat creep is when the filament is making rapid and or long retractions generally with small print areas and the hot or heated filament keeps getting pulled up into the part of the extruder that normally should remain cool. As this happens the filament that is higher up softens and then can form a type of blockage or clog. Usually these clogs can be pushed back out without disassembly but not always.

Without your cooling fan the heat was traveling up the tube in the extruder and softening the filament to the point where it formed that blockage.

So, don’t overdo retractions is the moral of this one.

Print temps will affect stringing a lot. Some brands and colors also are just more stringy.
If you are mostly getting the stringing on supports then I don’t worry so much about it.

I would get the slicer back to defaults with the first changes being - speed at 40mm/s or so until you get comfortable with how speeds work in relation to materials and part sizes.
Extrusion multiplier maybe mid 90’s for PLA and 100 for ABS and work from there. I don’t know why they put it so high.
Also you will need to measure the diameter of the filament in a few spots and take the average. On other slicers you can enter this but not on Flashprint.
So if your filament is at 1.68mm then you may need to raise the extrusion multiplier a tad to compensate. It will just take a little time to get the feel for it.