this post was submitted on 07 Sep 2024
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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by MissJinx@lemmy.world to c/3dprinting@lemmy.world
 

Edit: Thanks to everyone for the help! Just an update.

Thanks to @nate3d and @IMALlama comments below I calibrated the e-steps that were very under and it improved a lot.

I left the filament on the dryer for 8 hours and tested again with a 20mm /s speed and 220 C print temp and it was better (picture below)

Just to answer you all saying it's a clog or a hot end problem, it's not, the whole hot end, includong nozzle, heat block and everything else, even the PTFE tube are all brand new and I checked before.

This is still the best I could achieve and It took 3 hours to print this benchy lol

‐-------- Hi everyone, I'm once again asking for your help lol Since I’ve tried to print with wood I totally wrecked my printer so I changed the hot end and am trying to set it all up again. Since my printer already came built and working I don’t have much experience with things like this so if you could help me I would be very thankful

What do I need to twerk to make it print better again?

I’m using Cura slicer and trying to print a benchy with the settings below:

Nozzle: 0.4

Layer: 0.2

Printing temp: 220 (it wont print with lower temp)

Speed: 60

Retraction distance: 7

Retraction speed: 70

Edit: PLA

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[–] user1234@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 2 months ago

Make sure all of the parts of your hotend are tightened. Especially where the Teflon tube ends. I set up a new printer once and it was having similar issues and it ended up the nozzle wasn't fully tightened and was getting plugged up in the small gap. Changed the nozzle, cleaned the plugged material out, and made sure everything was tight, and it started printing just fine. Most PLA should print well at 200.