wrong temperature or the filament size is not correct, or transition zone too hot, build up of back flow molten plastic
You must withdraw the filament after the print ends, otherwise the residue heat will cause the PLA to go soft
Hmmm… some googling resulted in someone suggesting to point a fan at the stepper motor on the print head, and I managed to print a 1,5x size Marvin, which took longer than the time after which it usually quits working.
Pla on a Mini is not easy. I have experimented a lot with it and not always with succes.
In the end I thought it was too hot inside for Pla, even their own Pla.
So I tried printing with the door and hood open and an extra little usb fan blowing towards the printhead.
that gave me much better results. Even woodfill came out ok.
But it is mainly a Abs printer. And as I read below, always remove the filament after printing, then it won’t clog the next time so easely.
But I still like the printer very much, it makes nice prints.
Best, Joppe
Also, drop the nozzle height by 0.4mm from your normal ABS height. I print with PLA no problem. If you print with ABS check out the v2 platform heater for the mini, reduces warping and is an excellent addition!!
I print all sorts of ABS in the Mini. Never had problems with it.
Joppe
Well, same people also said PLA would work without problems, so I’m going to take what they say with a grain of salt from now on… and just buy my filament somewhere else.
I find Easyfill from Formfutura extremely good, though not cheap.
But I also printed with ABS filament costing 20 euro’s the kilogram and even that worked.
Its a pity though that the temp of the bed is not adjustable. With larger prints there is a severe chance of warping, but I use glue trying to prevent that. Sort of arabian gum we call it here in the Netherlands.
cheers.
Hi! What brand 20 EUR/kg are you using? I’m also in the Netherlands.
My experience sometimes is that if the bed adhesion is good, the part simply warps the perforated bed itself. Would a higher temperature reduce that?
Lack of adjustable temperature indeed is annoying, as is the lack of PLA support out-of-the-box. Lack of support for 3rd party software as well. But still, printer works very well and is relatively user-friendly if you stick to the original PP3DP ABS filament.
Though, I would try out a RepRap if I had to choose a printer again since it’s open-source.
Hi Werner,
123inkt is OK. That is the cheapest.
I don’t know if the heating of the bed has to be lower or higher since I cannot try it.
But I have another printer where everything is adjustable (Makerbot software) and I must say, every filament has its particular use. Unfortunately. Even different colors of the same manufacturer can differ.
Keep experimenting.
We had in the beginning the same problem while trying to use the PLA, we thought that could be the filament. But as the other guy said, we started to try printing with the door open, the fan at full power, and we changed the printing surface for a square of glass (3mm). In order to fix the printing, in Brazil, there is a hair spray called “Karina - Fixação Extra Forte” (Karina - Extra Strong Fixation). Also, we quit printing PLA after using ABS, because of the overheating of the nozzle.
By the time we start using this process, our problems with PLA reduced a lot!