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Dec 2016

I am guessing you haven’t been able to get supports to work under the overhang?

I would be happy to try also if you wanted to send the STL.

Something I’ve done with a similar situation is load the file into whatever cad program you use, and take the empty space under the trouble area and 3D print that shape with -.02mm on the outside. Then when I print the main object I put the “empty area prints” and hold them in place while the printer uses them as a support. I then slide them out at the end. I hope you understand what I mean.

ABS supports of the same material in S3D seem to break away easy for me. If you can manage it in HIPS even better.

Can you share a bit more info as to what all your settings in S3D look like? And specifically what kind of failure you’re getting with the overhang? It may come down to your support and bridging settings…

I do and that’s quite cleaver. Being a small, and 90-degree part I’m not sure it would work. Gotta remember that though, thanks!

I actually have been able to get the supports to work, and quite well. It is the ABS that then needs to print on top of the supports that is giving me the trouble. I have one print that was successful but dang W10 updated overnight and I hadn’t updated the selected profile in S3D. Ugh. Anyway, here are a few examples of what I’m running into:

I see what you are up against now.

How about if you make the support closer to the lip-under side and use dense supports for more coverage?

Just replied with a few pics to @wirlybird. The support is being printed in HIPS.

The overhang gaps in the model are 1/32" and 1/16".

My settings for those particular prints at the time were:

Support resolution in those pics is 1mm,

Support Infill is 50%

Extra Inflation 0.00mm

Dense Support Layers 1

Dense Infill is 70%

Horriz offset 0.20mm

Upper & Lower Separation Layers both 0

Currently trying 1 dense support layer and 70% dense infill %, and I have the vertical separation layers at 0. Considering turning up the ABS temp a bit to see if it will bond better at least when being extruded.

I print in ABS pretty much exclusively on my FFCP. I would definitely print the model more flat. Also, make sure your bed is level and your acceleration settings adjusted according to your bots f/w.

I was unable to attach my S3D FFF profile so I saved it to my g-drive and shared it…

My basic settings are 235 & 90 (right-extruder&bed temps) 85mm/s print speed, cooling fan off and I use ABS juice on the bed.

if the processes import properly, use the “ABS 020” and adjust your infill % and make sure support generation is on (Normal)and maybe change the support material resolution, I run 2.5mm on most stuff. Plus, I would use a “Helper Disc” in the corners to help with adhesion throughout the print. (attached one of my helper disc stl files)
helper_disk_small.stl (18.6 KB)

Thanks, I’ll give this a shot. I have not been using ABS juice, just letting it use the blue stuff on the QIDI bed (realizing I failed to mention I’m using the QIDI Tech 1 version). Seems to stick to the bed OK. Just that dang overhang!

Thanks @ChrisX35…believe it or not I’m actually printing a 3DBenchy with your QIDI ABS right now!

Had trouble in the beginning with the first layer so I removed the 0.05mm z-Axis offset you added (noted that in your comments) but that still didn’t help so I set the initial layer height to 150% and the first layer width to 125% and that fixed it.

Was surprised to see you had cooling at 70%. Will let you know how it turns out. Thanks!

Believe it or not the settings work great with my QIDI but every printer is different that’s why you run test prints and tweak things accordingly. I run my fan at a reduced speed because of overcooling issues and the part will warp or split.

Good luck

Thanks. The Benchy turned out pretty good so your settings are a known quantity for me now at least with the ABS filament alone. I was going to try adding back in the HIPS on the left extruder but instead right now I’m trying the part at a 45-degree angle on its end with a brim. Doesn’t require any supports at all that way and so far the brim is holding it down. We’ll see!

The other great thing about ABS is how it can be glued to itself with just some acetone. You can print separate overhang and glue it into place later.