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Sep 2016

I respectfully disagree. The slicer assumes too much, and you have to help it. Extrusion multiplier is a common and oft suggested way to get your printer dialed in. Every printer and filament has different properties, so you have to get your slicer to a point where it is defined for your particular printer and filament.

“The slicer assumes too much, and you have to help it.”
The slicer assumes you have calibrated the steps/mm. That’s how you “help it”

“Extrusion multiplier is a common and oft suggested way to get your printer dialed in.”
Suggested by who? Crappy looking prints are also common.

“Every printer and filament has different properties, so you have to get your slicer to a point where it is defined for your particular printer and filament.”
Correct. This is done through calibration of the extruder and measuring the diameter of each filament.

I print a lot of materials and I’m constantly changing nozzles and cannot compromise on uniform dimensional accuracy. You might get your printer “dialed in” with your method but it will not be repeatable when changing other factors. There are certain circumstances where the extrusion multiplier is useful but this is not it.

-Jesse

Adjusting feed distance, extrusion multiplier, filament diameter all do the same thing. They’ll all produce the same results. The only thing the extruder can do is push more or less plastic through.

“Adjusting feed distance, extrusion multiplier, filament diameter all do the same thing.”
This is somewhat correct but misleading.
The slicer calculates the amount of material extruded(volume) based on steps/mm(calibration) and filament diameter(should be measured with a caliper). When these numbers are correct you don’t need to touch the extrusion multiplier.

If repeatable precision/dimensional accuracy when switching materials or nozzles is important then this shortcut is working against you. If your machine is calibrated, then switching material means inputting the new filament’s diameter and you are good to go. If you’re currently dialed in with the extrusion multiplier, then instead of inputting in the diameter of new filament you are playing the extrusion multiplier game every time because you are “dialed in” based on trial and error, not numbers.

Hope that makes sense.

-Jesse