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peetree

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Posts posted by peetree

  1. Cura 3.5 fixed my "pause at height" issue with my S5, but now it seems to cause a "pause at height" issue with my UM 2+

     

    The nozzle does not cool to the specified standby temp after the pause. It stays at the printing temp and of course makes a mess.

  2. I have attempted several different builds that require a "pause at height/layer" for me to insert a part, then continue printing. After any pause at height operation, my S5 resumes by extruding a small blob of plastic in a location seemingly unrelated to the print. It then resumes printing, but just moves the head, with no extrusion. It is not a clogged nozzle. I've updated the firmware and I'm using Cura version 3.4.1

     

    Anyone else having an issue, and more importantly, is there a solution? I can't monitor the printer constantly to determine when to pause it manually. I need this feature to work.

  3. I don't think it matters that the rust is on the outside of this part, but you definitely don't want it migrating to any of the bearing surfaces.

    I'm going to make an educated guess that either you live in a humid area, or your printer is in a basement or other room that suffers from "dankness". In such a case I would make sure to lubricate the metal parts of the printer a little more frequently than recommended in the manual (sewing machine oil on the XY rods, grease on the threaded Z rod).

    It would also be a good idea to place a dehumidifier near the printer. Bonus: environmental control makes for better prints in addition to a happy machine.

    • Like 1
  4. I recently had a bad jam in my bowden tube. After several material changes, the wispy threads that sometimes get left behind bunched up and wrapped around the filament I was using. It was so bad it created a visible bulge in the tube:

    5a333d9070fac_2017-08-0310_19_30.thumb.jpg.b6fb17e5d5b111ef7c29344bb3f44e1b.jpg

    Normal methods for getting a broken piece of filament out of the tube were of no use, given how badly stuck this was. Here is what worked for unsticking a really bad (PLA) jam:

    1. Remove all the loose filament you can

    2. Remove the bowden tube from the printer

    3. Boil water

    4. Hold the tube under the hot water at the location of the jam for 2-3 minutes

    5. Quickly insert a clean, room temperature length of filament into the tube

    6. Use the clean filament to tap the jammed filament repeatedly until it comes out of the tube

    7. Allow the bowden tube to air dry, then replace on the printer

    5a333d9070fac_2017-08-0310_19_30.thumb.jpg.b6fb17e5d5b111ef7c29344bb3f44e1b.jpg

  5. Hi Becky,

    I can verify that with the UM2+ firmware, my ABS material profile is identical to yours.

    I also cannot raise the bed temperature over 100C.

    I rarely ever print in ABS so I would never have known this was problematic.

  6. I have this problem also. There is not a lot of diagnostic information about it yet, so I thought I'd share the symptoms I found:

     

    • Despite a clean bowden and extruder assembly, under extrusion persists
    • You may hear occasional loud pops and see the filament shudder (this is the gears slipping out of engagement)
    • During printing, the movement of the filament will become stuttered and anemic, but the motor will not skip back (because pressure is not building at the extruder)
    • Eventually the filament may stop moving at all
    • Low scraping or clicking sounds from the feeder

     

    Here is a visual of the feeder while this is happening:

     

    If you watch the slotted bearing (which is the end of the knurled wheel), you can see it moving very poorly, then stopping and sometimes skipping back slightly. If this happens to you it is wise to remove the plastic housing and check the position of the nylon gear on the shaft. It should be flush with the end of the shaft.

    • Like 1
  7. This sounds like a back-of-the-printer issue. In addition to checking for grinding filament, after a failed print check to see if there is tension on the length of filament between the spool and feeder. Check for tangles on the spool.

    Too much friction between the filament on the spool and the feeder will cause stoppage as the feeder can't push the filament to the extruder effectively.

    If the prints have very many retractions spaced closely together, this can cause grinding or deformation of the filament as well.

  8. I used to have this issue a lot. In my case it had nothing to do with the hot end and everything to do with the feeder and spool (UM2).

    The simple explanation was too much tension building up between the feeder and the spool due to a tangle, or simply because the stock spool holder and filament guide are not great designs and caused too much friction.

    Check behind the printer after a failure and see if it feels like the filament has been pulled tight. This would indicate a problem.

    If you're using the stock spool and filament guide I recommend printing an upgrade such as IRobertI's excellent low friction spool holder and Ppyromann's bearing filament guide

  9. This is something the Architecture side of my firm struggles with (they use ArchiCAD). It's important to give feedback to CAD software company about it so they can improve the 3D printing workflow. It doesn't solve your immediate need :\ but hopefully it gets architects a better solution soon.

    As an example, Solidworks has a tool called "defeature" which essentially takes complex hollow assemblies of many parts and reduces them to a single solid blob which is easier to convert to a closed mesh.

  10. I've recently upgraded my UM2 to UM2+ with the extrusion upgrade kit. Updated firmware.

    Everything seemed to go fine, but now the Y-axis motor won't run. I thought I must have damaged the wire, but I tested by plugging in the old feeder motor (now left over from the upgrade), with no movement there either.

    What happens is that the head won't home prior to running the bed leveling program; it homes in the X axis only, then it gives the "X or Y axis switch broken" error. But the switch works fine because if I manually home the head, the bed leveling program runs, but without any Y-axis movement.

    The board and the connector look fine, physically. Please, help me diagnose the problem. Electrical is not my forte.

  11. I think one of your switch isn't well plugged in so you've got this problem, the UM goes on security by showing this error message.

    Check it and send pics yeah, we'll glad to help you then (:

    OK, but what about the extruder location? That's not the correct location for the 1st step of leveling the build plate. The machine moved the extruder there, it wasn't set there from the beginning. That's why I've guessed that the X and Y motors are working as if they're swapped. I don't think there's an issue with the endstops.

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