ok looked into and will try recalibrating the e-step
ok so this is crazy the original setting was 93 steps/mm using the info from this article: 3D Printer E-step Calibration (Step-by-Step Guide) – 3dprintscape.com I changed that to 243.3 steps/mm
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Did it help? Is it now overextruding or is it about right?
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not sure doing a print right now,
it was extruding 100mm when i asked for 100mm
Edited by two-mountains
walls are certainly thicker now but need to do a few more tries to be certain
GregValiant 1,346
This is not a good story but I'll relate it for you as it is possible it might apply.
My Ender 3 Pro came with the "Noisy" mainboard. I bought a new "silent" board from Creality and installed it. About 2 weeks later my printer started under-extruding after printing for about an hour.
I recalibrated the E-steps and like yours, they went from 93 to 250. It was alright for about an hour to and hour and a half into a print and then the problem started again. The bottom line is that the new mainboard had a defective "E" driver chip. When it warmed up it would go bonkers and the prints would be under-extruded.
After some arguing back and forth Creality replaced the defective board with a new one.
Yes, the stock "E" steps are 93. Everyone pretty much ends up at 97 or so. Having to go to over 200 likely indicates a bad stepper driver chip.
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well the walls are adhering but now it seems to be pulsing on the extrusion, there are visible points moving diagonal along the print connected by stringing I included the Cura file used on the latest problem i believe that this is now an exageration of the lines seen in the piece to the left due to the increase in steps per mm
CE5_Part Studio 1 - sight tube.3mf
tia
ps greg that sounds like it could well be as the silent motherboard is part of the upgrade in the 5 pro over the 5
Edited by two-mountains
ps
GregValiant 1,346
Another thing you could check is the hot end to see if there is a partial clog between the bottom of the bowden tube and the back end of the nozzle. I found a coathanger laying around that is just the right diameter to push through the hot end. You can use filament but the hot end necessarily needs to be around 180 to get the nozzle out so you need to move fast.
Having to push the Esteps to over 200 is a bad sign though.
I looked through all the settings in that Project File you posted and they look fine. I was hoping to find that Cura was set to volumetric extrusion or maybe the filament diameter was set wrong (as gr5 suggested). They are both set correctly. That pretty much leaves us with a problem on the mainboard.
could this be the cause of the spotty print (i don't really know what to call it) gonna try a simple settings benchie to see if it was something i did
i have to use a raft as i damaged the magnetic bed
and I find my filament does better at 205-210*
otherwise this is all the recommended settings
Your newer photo is still showing classic underextrusion. Greg could be right in that you need a replacement stepper controller board. Or you may have some other serious hardware issue.
You could try making the board exposed to the air and have a fan blow on it. Hard. If that helps even just for the first 3 layers then that is an indication your stepper driver is overheating. Or you could look at the 4 stepper drivers with a thermal camera or IR temp sensor.
Another test is to fight the extruder. if you back it up a little so there isn't any pressure in the nozzle and then hold it back with one hand while making it go forward (or just be active) with the controller then a good extruder can push with about 5 pounds of force. It sounds like yours is only pushing with 1 pound of force. This just rules out that the problem is related to the hot end. It could still be many possibilities.
so I did the benchy and it turned out fine so i did a the other print(same file) and resulted in a good print. I quite it early as that piece has some incorrect dimensions but it seems to be good print wise, it also isn't having any of the poorer laminations i was also experiencing before. Will be keeping an eye on it to make sure the motherboard doesn't revert to the problem like in Gregg's case
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GregValiant 1,346
That is seriously under-extruded. Did you calibrate the E-steps on the printer?
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gr5 2,225
You are extruding only about half of what you should be. Maybe something is off by 2X? Maybe you told cura you have 2.85mm filament but you are actually using 1.75mm filament?
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