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Feb 2016

PLA is the easiest material to print if you are starting to 3D Printing, about printer settings, you should try to print a piece with different settings using your 0.4 mm and 0.2 mm nozzles (for example: layer height 0.25 mm, 0.1 mm and 0.06 mm), about infill 20% to 30% is always pretty good unless you are printing a piece with mechanical movements. Speed: try using 40 to 60 mm/s, Cooling: depends on material, PLA uses 100% cooling, CPE and ABS try avoid any cooling and print in a room with temperature about 23 to 25 degrees Celcius. Hope you do great. Regards.

>Speed: try using 40 to 60 mm/s,

The UM2+ has very high acceleration compared to most printers so 40mm/sec on the UM2 for a part less than 2 inches across is probably about the same as 100mm/sec on a typical printer. For printing long straight lines like printing a large cube the speeds are almost identical. But anyway you will get amazingly better quality if you slow it down to 35mm/sec on the UM2 series printers. It all depends on if you want beauty or functionl

These Print-in-Place designs might contain some good hints:

https://www.youmagine.com/designs/makey-robot 1

https://www.youmagine.com/designs/small-box-with-printed-in-place-lid 1

Also, to get tolerances exactly right without changing the original design file, you can expand or contract the toolpaths in the latest Cura releases (2.x). See also the screenshot image I added. Also, real time adjustment to the printer’s flow rate could be helpful in getting things to have gaps of < 0.05 microns and still be separate parts.

2 months later

If you have a dual extruder, print the part in ABS and the 0.5mm gap in HIPS. Let the finished part sit in Limonene (i order mine from Amazon) for a bit. It will dissolve the HIPS and doesn’t affect the ABS.