Filiment stuck at hotend
Posted: Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:49 pm
Greetings everyone!
My son and I finally finished the Rostock Max 3.2 build last night. After updating firmware, calibrating, and rechecking everything I can possibly recheck, the filiment was loaded and I printed the demo steam boat print. I was stoked that it worked so well! There was a little stringing, but that was on the trivial side of things.
So I then used Cura to slice the Due case (Adjusted temp to 200 as the demo print at 210 caused some stringing). Uploaded the file, and started printing. Everything seemed ok at first, but then I noticed a LOT of stringing. So I canceled the print thinking the hotend cooling fans were not on. Tweaked some fan settings, reuploaded, and started again.
This time, the print quality was really bad. I was seeing a lot of glumping, but let it proceed. I soon noticed it was skipping, then eventually just stopped laying down PLA at all. The head was moving about, but the surface was clean. Stopped the print again and started inspecting. I tried to use the filiment extraction macro, but it did nothing but grind on the PLA. I found that the filiment melted slightly and swelled inside the PTFE tube at the hot end. It took me about an hour of tugging and milking the filiment out.
Which leaves the question: Why would the filiment do this? I could not find a user manual or maintenance manual anywhere. After a print (or a cancel) should you immediately use the filiment extraction macro?
Also, should I run a calibration prior to each print? If so, which one?
Looking through the Cura setup instructions, I did discover that I did not import the profiles. So, I created a new file based on the PLA Default profile and will try again tonight. Any advice yall got to help correct/prevent this would be greatly beneficial.
My son and I finally finished the Rostock Max 3.2 build last night. After updating firmware, calibrating, and rechecking everything I can possibly recheck, the filiment was loaded and I printed the demo steam boat print. I was stoked that it worked so well! There was a little stringing, but that was on the trivial side of things.
So I then used Cura to slice the Due case (Adjusted temp to 200 as the demo print at 210 caused some stringing). Uploaded the file, and started printing. Everything seemed ok at first, but then I noticed a LOT of stringing. So I canceled the print thinking the hotend cooling fans were not on. Tweaked some fan settings, reuploaded, and started again.
This time, the print quality was really bad. I was seeing a lot of glumping, but let it proceed. I soon noticed it was skipping, then eventually just stopped laying down PLA at all. The head was moving about, but the surface was clean. Stopped the print again and started inspecting. I tried to use the filiment extraction macro, but it did nothing but grind on the PLA. I found that the filiment melted slightly and swelled inside the PTFE tube at the hot end. It took me about an hour of tugging and milking the filiment out.
Which leaves the question: Why would the filiment do this? I could not find a user manual or maintenance manual anywhere. After a print (or a cancel) should you immediately use the filiment extraction macro?
Also, should I run a calibration prior to each print? If so, which one?
Looking through the Cura setup instructions, I did discover that I did not import the profiles. So, I created a new file based on the PLA Default profile and will try again tonight. Any advice yall got to help correct/prevent this would be greatly beneficial.