does it come apart? I took my nozzle apart last night (different kind) and thought i had it back together, but i was having issues with it not feeding, checked it while it was hot and it was not all the way back together, there was cooled plastic in the threads during reassembly. There was a space between the barrel, and the nozzle, which was catching the filament and not allowing it to make it to the nozzle. I disconnected the hot end from the “x” carriage and let it heat up to temp, and re tightened everything. Worked like new after that.
I had the same issue with my printer this weekend. Turned out the room was too hot! (because of this heat wave in Central Europe) The fan on my extruder couldn’t handle the job and this caused the filament to overheat and melt in the upper part of the extruder, causing a blockage. I started noticing gaps in my print and it got worse. When I extruded manually, it worked fine, because the nozzle only warmed up temporarily. When printing automatically, the extruder overheated after 10-15 minutes.
Then I moved my printer to the cellar (where it’s still cool) and everything worked just fine! Since you mentioned that the problem started when you moved your printer, I thought this may be related…
Hopefully you’ll find the solution! Remember, from every problem you’ll learn something
I know about the heat wave - I was in the middle of it (nl)
I’ve read before that the room temperature affects the printing process - especially the quality of the filament. Direct sunlight and a high humidity are killing.
Sadly my problem isn’t temperature related - so I will look further. Thanks for sharing anyway, interesting!
Even for PLA I use my beloved heated-bed. There is only one thing worse than using a glue stick for adhesion and that is blue tape ^^. The problem in the picture was under-extrusion; not enough filament to stick to the bed so it got loose
The sliced models are fine - and I set first layer print speed on purpose on 20m/s.
The M503 is a great tip to check if your motor is set to the right amount of steps per mm!
Just to be sure I unscrew the ‘tensioner’ and put it back together - along with removing the nozzle and cleaning it out that solved my issue!.
UPDATE: as many suggested I removed the nozzle and cleaned it out. Same for the the ‘screw’ part on the extruder. I checked every screw and tighten it where needed. Furthermore I took the ‘tensioner’ apart and screw it back together.
That worked!
Here is a freshly printed bunny to thank you all for your suggestions!
Cool, glad you got it figured out. There is a really nice resource over at bukobot that I have been using for a while now and it works great. Lots less painful than a full tear-down.
nozzle-cleaning [Bukobot 3D Printer Instructions & Docs] 19 Its a really great article and shows exactly what to look for. I have found this necessary especially if going from a very high temp material to something like abs or pla as the nozzle still has a little material in there which can cause flow problems/increased back-pressure in the hotend.