The prints are indeed oriented as they were on the build plate.
It is the wave fronts who are vertically aligned. I don’t think it is Z-wobble because I have multiple wave “points” on every layer, which together make a vertical line, Z-wobble would be happening at layer changes, not multiple times in a layer.
After looking around a bit more I have heard that putting the printer on a hard surface such has a concrete block could help but it didn’t work for me. I could also be caused by flow control issues but again, didn’t work for me.
After looking a close look at the machine during printing I’m almost certain this is caused by vibrations, either through ghosting or plain old resonance of the printer but I did not find a way to fix it.
I hope this helps you, if you find a solution that works for your problem I’d be really happy if you could let me know
I’m rather late to the party, looking up an issue im having myself and came across this. Just incase your sitll having this issue i think i know the solution. Atleast to @dimitriz anyway. I think @I_am_me 's issue could possibly be the same depending on your infill settings.
It looks to me like the infill layers are showing through at the edge where there is slightly more plastic inside so the layer lines push out the outer shell causing slight ridges. First test: Hole the part up to a strong light and see if the ripples align with the infill lines. If they do, just increase your shell thickness in your slicer. I had this issue at 2 shell layers so i increased it to 4 and my surfaces no longer get this.
As I said in my first post, it’s not a problem with infill. It happens even on 0% infill or vase mode.
But you’re right, for most people this kind of ‘symptoms’ are because of infill poking through.
What is the print speed? What slicer?
This really looks like a mechanical issue. If it were acceleration or something like that (Ringing) it would fade quickly along the face and definitely would be very unlikely to do it on a 45 degree pass in relation to the X and Y. The first clue is the “rhythm” of the waves, they are persistent across the face.