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May 2015

I bought my Mankati printer about a month ago. The reasons for doing so was that I was looking for a reasonably priced printer that was able to printer somewhat larger volume prints and had the capability to print with two colors. After making a long list of available printers, the Mankati Fullscale XT seemed to fit the bill. It has been busy printing every day so I wanted to share some of my experiences.

First, the Mankati is a very solidly build printer, but I did have some startup problems.

The connectors on the stepper motors are very small and fragile. It is easy to break them. These were outsource by Mankati off course, but I would have like them to be a bit more solid.

Second, the spool holder on the back could have been placed apart somewhat more.

I’ve already had filament getting caught when using full 1 kg spools.

After about two weeks of printing I suddenly started to experiences severe offsets in my prints in the Y-axis. After searching and looking, I found one of the screws holding one of the drive wheels to the axis was lost. It was easily replaced, but nevertheless, it took me two days before I figured out what the problems was. This of course could have happened to any printer.

The printing bed with the attached heating platform is not 100% flat. This seems to be a common problem, but it makes calibrating your nozzle distance very important.

I would have liked the LCD display to have been a bit bigger to display more information and possibly in a different color. This is however a minor thing and not very important.

The push-turn knob works ok, but it the screw loosened itself recently so it had to be tightened again.

Although the printer can print at speeds up to 150 mm/s, I rarely go beyond 45 mm/s. Especially for small and detailed prints I often go down to 30 mm/s or even lower.

I also rarely print at 0.10 mm or smaller. It seems the quality of the print does not really increase with such small layers and does not justify the doubled printing time.

Other than this, the Mankati proved to be relatively problem free so far.
It seems it’s not a very popular printer but so far, I’ve found it to be very dependable.

  • created

    May '15
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    Jun '15
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Hi, I AGREE WITH EVERYTHING you comment. Perhaps the biggest problem I’ve found is in the part of the cooler fan, I work with a slightly elevated temperature and the piece was deformed. The solution was to print a new piece in ABS and ready. Best regards.

We found and our customers very similar issues, many replace the bed with a new thicker glass or aluminium, also you can mod the feeders to help increase the flow into the nozzles with less feeder clicking. We also sell ours with a modified head cooling system, it has a light which helps with levelling and such but also cools the Teflon tube in the peeks which reduces the deformation of the Teflon and reduces blockages on the feeders in the heads. And allow better cooling for abs and pla. Also try other slicers you will find that cura is good but other slicers can give you more control on aspects of cooling, ooze control and such.

Regards

dave

Hi Jordy,

So far, I have not had any real problems with printing PLA. But when printing ABS, Nylon or Bronzefill, I simply leave the cooling fan off.
I have found than often when printing at temperatures about 230 degrees, the nozzle temp temperature can drop significantly during a print and with the higher temp filaments, this will ruin your print. So, for such prints, I do not select the Fan option in the MankatiUM.

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