Go to homepage
8 / 12
Sep 2015

I have a consistent problem with mousebites on my airwolf 3d hd. it seems to be printing fine for a while, but I always get one eventually during a print. seems to happen more when there is a lot of retraction involved like a part with towers far apart, but happens nonetheless. I’ve already tried cleaning the extruder and cleaning out the hot end. I’m at a dead end right now. any help would be appreciated. the material I’m using right now is the white abs from matterhackers

  • created

    Sep '15
  • last reply

    Dec '15
  • 11

    replies

  • 2.8k

    views

  • 7

    users

Hi Ohms, you may want to take a look at the hobbed bolt that feeds the filament. Sometimes, it starts to fill the grooves with residue, and makes it less prone to feeding, thus sliding at points and possibly “bitting”. you can first try with compressed air, shooting into the feeder hole, or take it apart, but keep the correct order of the O rings and bearings so that you can put it back together in the right order. don’t over tighten the exterior bolts when you reassemble. see if this works. you may need to slow down and/or increase the temp as well

Hi,

2.85 mm - 0.05 + must be within tolerance filaments.

Check the forward speed of the filaments.

If the material is very slow predicament correctly.

If it is too fast to be able to bite a mouse.

In addition, the distance between the nozzle plate is very important.

If the bed does not stick too far.

If the mouse can bite too close.

I have cleaned out the bolt and calibrated the bed. I did notice though that I changed the feeding tube and this one is not as stirdy so when it is extruding, it tends to bend a lot to one side. You think that might have something to do with it?

H,

No. You can not use a filament.

2,85mm + - 0.05mm tolerance there.

If you experience with your mouse bites are not suitable for filaments.

2 months later
1 month later

What temp are you running your filament at? What speed are you printing at? What size nozzle are you running… I have noticed on my AirWolf HDx I sometimes need to run 10-15 degs. higher on the temp to prevent mousebite… You can counter act the higher temp by running your fan… Also try taking apart the extruder feed assembly and clean out the groves of the bolt, there are also two little springs that help sandwich the filament in between the bolt and a bearing. I took mine out and stretched them to add a little bit more pressure to feed the filament continuously.