I’ve had similar problems where the thermistor said it was 30 degrees warmer than it actually was. I verified this with an infrared heat sensor. New thermistor solved my problem, probably was a faulty cable.
Ok, I’ll try to buy one during the weekend. In any case, it’s a good tool to have in the lab
I’ve seen this issue before when the nozzle seems to be clean, I’m wondering what your PTFE coupler looks like and if it might be worn out? I change mine about every 4-500 hours but it depends what temps you normally work at. It’s a good suggestion below with poking something into the nozzle. I use a 28 gauge needle (0.36mm), and you can find them any medical supply store. I would also look at the gear box in the back. Sometimes when small bits of plastic accumulating in it can slow the forward movement thus causing underextrusion.
I have a problem that looks like this pretty frequently. It may or may not be the same thing, but usually for me it’s that the nozzle isn’t “primed”. That is, the material has been retracted at the end of a print or when I aborted a print and the start g-code dis not sufficiently compensate for this before attempting to print the first layer.
If that’s the problem, there are tqo solutions:
1. Go into maintenance>advanced>move material and spin the dial until material comes out, then hit cancel and start the print.
2. Change your starting g-code so that it includes a command to extrude a bunch (I call this “priming” the nozzle) before beginning the first layer.
I suppose the other possibility is that your filament tangled… I always forget to check for that first.
by the way, glad the pinecone lamp came out nicely. Sorry for never getting back to you about our g-code analyzer. Unfortunately it only supports rep-rap g-code and does not yet support ulti-gcode.
No problem at all, I’m quite sure that the problem wasn’t the Gcode. I’ll try to order a new Teflon part: honestly, I believe that it is the problem.
I had a similar problem and it turned out to be the extruder. The gears inside the new feeder had begun to push each other apart sideways, down the shafts. As a result, the gear on the stepper motor had moved down the shaft toward the motor, resulting in a loss of movement to the filament. At first I thought it was grinding the filament, but there were no marks - it simply stopped turning the gear.
To fix it, I have applied glue to the shaft of the stepper motor and reattached the gear, in the same position down the shaft as in the upgrade video. As a precaution, I have also glued the bigger gear onto its shaft end.
Hi Jockspice,
Thanks for your suggestion: I have already checked the extruder and, apparently, it’s working in a correct way.
@idamartha @Jaime_1 @SlashDev @jockspice @Clean3D @bramthats @Jamburger @will_kostelecky
Thanks to all of you! Finally, I solved the problem. I disassembled and checked all the hotend. The problem was some PLA wedged between the nozzle and the Teflon.
…And the problem is back, sigh!