Every single one of us here has been exactly where you are now Jackson. Soon you’ll be an expert on all the things you’re struggling with today an then you will get a chance to pay the community back.
-James
Every single one of us here has been exactly where you are now Jackson. Soon you’ll be an expert on all the things you’re struggling with today an then you will get a chance to pay the community back.
-James
Wow! Thanks for the detailed reply James! I really appreciate the support
I will try and post my replies to your replies here. (I know that sounds weird)
As for the Z-Offset, mine was set to 0. Is this normal? If so, should I increase it to .2? I am not quite sure what you meant by “a single layer height” I will definitely try adjusting the Z-Offset and Flow Rate, as that seems to be what a lot of people are suggesting.
In terms of the First Layer Width and Thickness, I had already set the Thickness to 0, as I had heard this would help on other forums I had read. With the First Layer Width, mine was set to 150. You were suggesting I turn this down to 100?
Finally, with Simplify3D, I am leaning towards buying it, just because of the reviews I have read. I am definitely having trouble with support material in Cura, and I have heard that Simplify 3D is very good with support material. I haven’t had too many problems with thin walls, but I have had a few.
Wait, and for the Filaments, I have already ordered some Colorfabb XT for my printer, which has gotten some great reviews. I haven’t heard of Verbatim PLA, but I will check it out.
Thanks again for the SUPER detailed reply! All this support is awesome!
Jackson
Hey there,
If your model can support it, I put a .5mm or bigger parameter chamfer around the edges that contact the build plate. This lets the melted plastic spread, but under the outline of the model. It doesn’t have to be .5, just adjust what works then trim the excess spread.
Also, look at FLEX3D.com 3. I just received a build plate that will stick any plastics without heat and you lift it off with your print attached then twist or bow the build plate to remove the parts. They have all different sizes to choose from.
Jim
I just received 2 FLEX3D plates too. Firing it up with an ABS print right now.
I hope it works as good as they say.
Steve
Thanks for the reply Jim! I will definitely try adjusting my parameter chamfer, and see what that does!
As for FLEX 3D, I have heard good things about it! I might consider ordering one just to see how it performs on my machine.
Thanks Again for the great reply!
Jackson
Careful with this Jackson. Fleks3D is not compatible with the either the PEI print surface on your heated bed, or the automatic leveling features of the Lulzbot Mini. You would need to do some serious modifications to try that out.
-James
Hi Jackson,
Sorry for the delay. If you looks at the materials that Aleph Objects sent along with your printer there is a check sheet signed by the person who calibrated your printer. One of the values on that sheet was the Z-Offset that is hard-coded into your firmware. It’s slightly different for every Mini. What I would do is carefully watch the printer as it’s laying down plastic on the first layer, if it looks like the nozzle is too close or too far from the print bed, then adjusting the Z-offset in Cura is an easy way to fix that. Adjusting the filament diameter and feed % will sort of fix that problem too, but you won’t actually be fixing the root cause, just doing a work around, that will have a negative effect on all layers but the first layer. The Z-Offset parameter is how you fix height problems for the first layer specifically, which seems to be a good portion of your problem.
TLDR; Fiddle with it a bit, try different values, see if it improves.
Seems like you’re making progress. Let us know how it goes.
-James
I just tried the Fleks3D on my Lulzbot TAZ5 and didn’t turn on the heated bed. Of course I first tried a hard print in ABS and couldn’t get the first layer to stick. I’m a little discouraged with it at this point and might have wasted my money.
Any suggestions?
Steve
I don’t want to come off as too negative, but I really seriously doubt you’ll get better results with the Fleks3D plates than you do with your heated bed printing in ABS. The problem with ABS prints sticking, has nothing to do with adhesion, or stickiness if you will. The problem with ABS is that as it cools the material shrinks, quite a lot. This causes the plastic to rip itself free of the build plate and warp pretty badly, the best way to combat this, no the only way to combat this, is to control the cooling process. A heated bed keeps the plastic from shrinking on the bottom couple layers, and thus it sticks well. A heated build chamber would keep the whole part from shrinking too quickly, and the deformation would be nice and uniform.
TLDR; No matter what marketing tells you, nothing beats heat for ABS.
And just in case this offended anyone, I’m not saying it’s impossible to print in ABS without a heated bed or build chamber, there is plenty of evidence of people doing just that, but you need to pay very careful attention to the entire process, including the model geometries you are printing.
-James
Out of curiosity, why are you using HIPS?
I’ve found:
PLA - Best dimensional accuracy, but shatters
ABS - Tougher, can warp a bit. Wears better than PLA.
Nylon - Really tough, tends to warp. I swear by Taulman.
HIPS - Nice dimensionally, nice quality, and ABS/PLA stick to it. But brittle…
I got HIPS originally for doing “lost foam casting”, but it doesn’t burn out cleanly enough, so it usually just sits on the shelf (If I’m burning out in an oven anyway, PLA smells much better).