Thank you! I will mess around with it today. For the prints above the standby temperature was 180 C. I was watching the temperature because I had the same suspicion and there is no temperature difference when this is printing from its printing temperature. I am still going to try messing around with it though.
I think you should ask TAZ people. Or maybe try printing at half the speed you ahve been. You are probably just going too fast for the extruder (layers too thick or too high speed).
I will have to give them a call. If speed was the problem wouldn't the first few layers be bad too?
Recommended Posts
KickahaOta 14
From what I've learned so far, this usually requires an adjustment in Standby Temperature.
When, say, Material 1 is printing, the hot end for that material heats up to the Printing Temperature you've defined. When Material 2 is printing, the hot end for Material 1 is allowed to cool down to the Standby Temperature. This is quite a difference -- printing temperatures are typically 200C and more, and the default Standby Temperature is 100C.
Sometimes this can cause the filament to fail to heat up all the way in time, so it winds up not printing (or at least leaving gaps).
Note that setting the Standby Temperature to match the Printing Temperature probably isn't the right plan either -- that can cause oozing from the unused nozzle. You'll probably need to experiment to find a Standby Temperature that lets the material print on cue without causing oozing.
Posted too soon
Link to post
Share on other sites