What brand and type is that PLA? I can’t imagine the PLA I am using wrapping up like spaghetti like that. I would think it would break first unless it is getting that warm.
I would also have to agree that the feed rate is to high or something like a partial clog is causing a reduced flow.
It looks like blue is jamming. One trick I found is to lightly coat the first 2" above the extruder with 3-in-one oil. I just coat my fingers a little and rub it onto the filament. This helps lubricate the filament path and has virtually eliminated jams on my machine. Good luck!
The PLA that comes with the flashforge is junk. I think you will see when you get a good roll of PLA, your problem will go away.
In the meantime: measure your filament with calipers along a good stretch of it. Put the highest number into the slicer software.
Print cooler.
But the best advice is just pitch it and get better filament. You are probably the 5th poster in the last few monthes with this issue with Flashforge PLA.
I tried to search for it on Italian Amazon, but it’s sold only by 3rd party resellers at the ridicolous price of 150+€. Just got a spool from German Amazon
Thanks to everyone who kindly answered. I noticed that the stock filament feeder was more an hindrance than a guide for my PLA filament (no problems with the ABS Filament instead) and for some reason the filament twisted while moving towards the extruder (it was already mounted so that it rotated in the proper direction).
By lowering the extruder temperature at 190C and the plate at 70C I was able to successfully print the filament feeder upgrade for my printer.
I tried again to do the cube print but I think that the default temperatures are just wrong (L:220C, R:220C, Plate: 110C) and I got another failure with a jam worse than the one attached in my question. I’ll try to print something else in the next hours.
If you are printing PLA at those temps they are way high. Those would be temps for ABS. I think all of that heat is the issue causing the jams. The PLA is getting to soft up at the feed.
No, i don’t think so. Usually there will be a cooling fan for the filament above. If the the filament above getting soft, that means its cooling is not ok. I tried on my own printer for printing PLA in 220 degree, it was ok. I don’t know whether flashforge printer can print flexible filament, if so, soft will not be the problem.