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Sep 2016

I have a prototype model I needed to mock up for a car build the company is doing. It’s a large piece that will really test the Z-18’s limits. I started the print and realized the print had significantly shifted near the beginning of the process, “no problem”, I thought," as long as it doesn’t shift like that in a more critical location". Then I ran out of filament, changed the roll and continued on, now the printer began printing at that original location, the one it started at prior to “the shift”. Since there were no supports of course it just started printing in mid-air and turned into a mess quickly. I ask if there is anyone who may have encountered such a thing in the past. This seams to me that it isn’t a belt issue because the shift is in a diagonal direction and is an almost perfect 45 degree angle, I don’t think both belts shifted the same amount at the same time, that just seams too coincidental. Mind you this is a huge print so the slicing took a half hour alone, and the over-all print time is around 70 hrs.

  • created

    Sep '16
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    Sep '16
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I have a MB replicator and it has never shifted on me. Check to make sure the power supply fan is operational. I’ve never disassembled mine so I don’t know much about the internals but maybe a fan somewhere has malfunctioned and causing the driver to overheat.

considering the x and y both shifted at the same time, I find it likely the nozzle got snagged on the print itself (like another person suggested)

So, your printer, probably due to a mechanical issue, shifted the print. The printer can’t know this happened, and continued to print.

When it hit the limit switches so you could add more filament, the printer is put back to the original xyz, and continued the print.

The layer shift is a mystery you need to fix, but the behaviour after the filament change is expected.