this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2024
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submitted 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) by Grippler@feddit.dk to c/3dprinting@lemmy.world
 

I have some very consistent issues with warping when printing ASA/ABS, which is really annoying since I'm trying to print my voron parts. It's not warping massively, but enough to mess things up.

I print with these general settings, on a textured PEI flex-plate.

  • heated chamber @ 45-47C (can't go much higher)
  • bed temp @105C
  • first layer 255C, other layers 245C
  • fan off, unless it's an overhang >=50% or layer time is <10s. Fan maxes out @70% unless bridging.
  • speed 200/120 mm/s inner/outer walls
  • first layer 50mm/s, 80mm/s infill

I've tried both with my regular Z-offset which creates a good uniform first layer, and slightly lower to kind of push it more on to the plate (but worse looking)

  • I've cleaned the plate with pure IPA
  • I've tried glue stick
  • I've tried brim both skirts/mouse ears, which help but don't eliminate it. (5mm, 0.15mm space)

ABS seems to be a little easier to print than the ASA. I'm using filament from Polymaker

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[–] Grass@sh.itjust.works 2 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (2 children)

I borrowed a thermometer from work that gets calibrated every couple weeks or so, and measured the surface of the bed of my printer. when the bed reads 90 in the printer firmware, the surface is only 78, but if I leave it for another 20 minutes or so both will be 100. My printer's temp probe is on the bottom, and the top has a magnet then spring steel. It takes a while for it to heat all the way through.

My chamber temps were also totally wrong so I changed the temp probe and that was fixed.

My abs problems went away, asa still curls but I'm leaning towards that being slicer settigs

edit: i was also testing setting the temp too high then dropping it when the surface is at the target, but the plastic sheath on the crimped ferrules melted and the screw terminal bubbled. there might be stuff I could do to make it safer but I'm not inclined to chase it right now.1000011535

[–] halfapage@lemmy.world 5 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) (1 children)

Holy shit dude this connector is an active fire hazard. You have to replace it, or the board, do not use the printer as it is now. Also remake terminals on wires. Do wires get hot as well? Something has too much resistance and acts as a heater, it's unsafe.

It should not burn like that even on full power. If your bed heater MOSFET ever shorts for any reason, it WILL pass through all power the fuse would let pass. If it burned like that and fuse didn't budge, imagine what can happen then. No wonder your bed takes a while to heat up when some of the power is wasted heating the connector.

[–] Grass@sh.itjust.works 1 points 4 hours ago

makes sense. already have better boards lined up for both printers, pending time off work to install and rewire. Honestly I expect assorted smoke and burning from creality stock boards and the ones I've sold or given away were sent off with aftermarket controllers that the internet and myself have more faith in. This was one of the last 2 functioning stock boards I've ive been using for 3d printing experiments I don't want to do on more expensive gear.

[–] ShepherdPie@midwest.social 4 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Yikes you should consider replacing that screw terminal with a new one. With all the charring, it's possible that it's not making a great connection between the board and wire, which causes higher resistance and the terminal to heat up further.

[–] Grass@sh.itjust.works 1 points 4 hours ago

I have more terminals to swap in but I'll be replacing the board anyway. The other identical board never did this but I also never tried pushing the limits on that one.