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13 / 19
Feb 2017

I have a Flashforge Dreamer 3d, printing PLA at 205 degrees for the extruder and 65 for the bed. The first 5 or so layers of all of my prints have a very subtle but strange blobbing and then everything after that is smooth. Any ideas? I’ve tread leveling not only with the printers leveling but also simplify 3d wizard. I also have retraction set at 2mm.

Attached is a picture of too prints up close…notice the first few layers are extra blobby then everything smooths out? Any thoughts or suggestions?

So, I’m new to 3D printing myself and by way of disclaimer, I have only printed with ABS so far. In your picture, it looks like the same effect I get when my machine is running too hot. I will be ordering some PLA in the near future, but as I have read up on it a bit, most folks seem to use PLA with the heated bed turned off (I’ll wait on some more experienced folks to weight in on that).

This link was shared by someone a while back and I found it helpful, so I hope you can use this for your own troubleshooting too; https://www.simplify3d.com/support/print-quality-troubleshooting/ 5

Realy dont know but. Set al the settings of your slicer to default maybe or try a different temperature on your bed

Try reducing the bed temp. 60c is quite high for PLA. 45-50c is more usual. Combined with print temp at 205 it could be causing this. The Dreamer is capable of far better prints than shown in your pic.

Try reducing the temperature of the extruder for at least 10 degrees, I always print pla with 190-192 degrees. Also check if your build plate is leveled

In general, it looks like it’s running too hot. Drop the temperatures on both the extruder and bed, but especially the bed. Open the doors to increase air circulation. Turn on the fan. It smooths out a bit after it gets several layers away from the bed because the temperatures are slightly lower.

I run pla on my dreamer at 190 extruded and bed at 50. I use a glass bed with blue tape for adhesion

this has has worked for several brands and wood pla

good luck!

Thanks…the reason my bed was so high is because my prints keep curling as if its cooling too quick…any ideas how to lower the bed temp but prevent the bottom of the prints from curling?

I suggest to lower bed temp to 20 degrees.

In addition I have simular with another brand 3D printer where I had to ensure to set teh extruder to 210 degrees celcius (PLA) but put an additional fan at the back of the building plate. The problem in my case was that the layers did not have sufficient time to cool down when the next layer was already put on top.

You can tweak your software to increase the total layer print time to 10 or 15 seconds minimum but this will dramatically increase print time. So not what you want. give it a try.

BLEEBIT - De 3D Print Professional

I would agree with most of the ideas here but I think you have a bit of over extrusion.

What slicer?

Lower the bed temp after the first layer by 10c or so. Also try going lower on the extruder maybe 190-195. Also slow it down some depending on how fast you are going and turn on the fans (more cooling).

Run a test to check extrusion rate.

That issue is because the first layer is printed too close to the bed. Assuming a value of 1 gives you a calibrated extruder you are printing too close to the bed by about half.