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May 2015

The glass type is borosilicate it’s flat and designed for heat applications. Just design it up and get it made. Its basically a square plate with 4 holes so they aren’t that expensive, or use aluminium that will do the same trick as well. The heater is just stuck on so you can carefully peel it off or just buy a spare one. It’s not too hard to remove and re-stick. The bed will take longer to heat but much flatter and usually gets better initial layers for finer prints.

Regs

dave

I have one since July 14, and is very satisfied, except from the support team’s responce time and quality.

ie. I need some new nozzels for the extruder. They never responded, and had made some my self.

thinglaver

Looks very nice :slight_smile:

What settings do you use for an 80 micron print?

So far, I mostly print at 0,20mm (200 micron) because I didn’t see any quality difference between 100 micron and 200 micron.

Do you change the nozzle-to-bed distance to do that? How fast do you print at 80 microns?

Am very interested in improving my print quality, especially for small prints.

Hey @awhv, every now and then we ask a community member to share his printing settings for printing a Marvin on a certain printer. Would you be willing to start a new post with your Marvin 2, while also adding an image of it as well? It’s a really nice Marvin and this will help other Mankati owners nail their initial reviews when joining the platform. Thanks

That’s a bit strange. When I had the problems with the Y-axis offset I took some pictures and sent them to Mankati support. Of course it was at night over there, but the next morning I had good reply and spent some time exchanging emails.

Luckily, I was able to find the source of my problem myself and solve it quickly, but their replies were rather prompt.

Hi Gabriella3d

The 80micron print wasn’t the Marvin it the other image labelled 80micron print (Marvin was done on our dnk enhanced machine apologies for the confusion) however I found that it was more the process than the machine so these would be the things that I feel made the difference for a fairly clean print abs Marvin.

My thoughts on printing the Marvin with ABS

  • Nozzle size I printed 0.2mm but 0.3 on the mankati would be fine and work just as well.
  • Keep the printing temp low I printed at 230 but each machine will change so test this. too cool will delaminate the part layers.
  • Cool air over the part to assist in bridging, this is ok for small parts but a big no no for large ones or thin walls with ABS. the fan also helps in cooling the layers to give more consistent layer forming and reduce layer spillage.
  • Bed level it really well or if you are too busy just print a raft, this helps compensate for bed levelling issues if you want to just print fast and get it done. this is esp true when printing fine layers.
  • A good base like buildtak helps heaps as well. its also means that the bed temp can be tuned down.
  • I use different slicing applications for different tasks so learn heaps about all sorts of slicing applications you will be paid off in results. for this part I used cura. however im trailing other slicers now and getting slightly better results again. (on my dnk machine that is)
  • Speed: as your printing with low temps with a tighter nozzle print speeds need to come down considerably.
  • infill you need good infill but not 100% as we are cooling the part infill will help heaps with the ABS cooling.

So apologies for any confusions but we have several machines we use. but personally there is no reason why you cant get the Mankati to print to the same levels. We use our mankati heaps.

Regards

Dave

Thanks so much for the clarification and for taking the time to reply. Would it be ok with you to share these settings in a separate thread 4, i.e. ‘Tips on Printing Marvin on a Mankati with ABS’? The reason I’m asking is that sometimes valuable information tends to get lost in comment threads, while a stand-alone post is by far easier to find. If anything, I can start a new thread 4 on your behalf.

Thanks again for this. Much appreciated!

27 days later