From clean to blobbing stringy mess
Posted: Tue Jun 25, 2013 8:02 pm
So I get everything calibrated and had a few good prints out of my Max when I decided to try and print a large part (the reason I got the machine) It was an eight hour print so I kept an eye on it for an hour or so before going to bed. A few hours later my wife gets up for work and takes a peak at the machine and tells me "it still thinks it's printing, but it's not". i go have a look and the hobbed pulley has chewed through the filament, so no more filament going to the hot end. The print looks very good until the last few layers where it looks starved for material. The remaining filament in the bowden tube shows signs that the pulley had been slipping before it finally ate through the filament. Ok so it seems like it jammed and needs to be cleared. I didn't know why it jammed, but a jam seemed apparent.
Stock seemecnc hotend EZ truder cold end - ABS - 222c 10mm/s first layer - 220c 40mm/s other layers
I bring the temp to 235c and extrude some fresh filament in, nothing comes out a first, then a rush of charred filament comes out and after a few cm it extrudes clean. So now I think I have my clog solved. I print again and it is a blobby mess. Excess filament everywhere. It doesn't seem stringy anywhere. I also see the stepper lose grip on the filament and slip forward occasionally. So i check my extruder calibration. All looks good. I try agin, same thing. The hotend seems to require excessive force to extrude. So I take the thing apart and check the PTFE lining. The inner tube has in fact contracted a tiny bit at the nozzle end. So I ream it out slightly and flip it around so the clean end is at the nozzle. It didn't feel perfect when I just slid some filament through by hand but it did feel better. Now I am getting stringy/blobby prints. The attached photo has the calibration pyramid I did just before the big print failure and the last little fan cowling I tried to print.
I have a E3D hotend on the way as well as some new PTFE tubing. I have messed with the stepper current settings, no help. I have measured the extruded material (in air) and it actually turned out to be .7 from my .5 nozzle, so my nozzle setting may be wrong but if anything it should be easier to extrude through.
I figure it must be either the PTFE or the nozzle causing the problems. I did not have a PEEK fan at the time of the original failure. So I suspect that is when the PTFE lining was damaged and now is too snug to be free and easy flowing. I don't know how the nozzle would become a problem from simply sitting at 220c for a few hours. That's what it does anyway. Oh and I measured the filament diameter after the failure so that is current. I do think my filament was relatively damp. I have since baked it and tried extruding into open air and the extruder still slips (even at 235c when the pyramid was done at 220c). Everything ABS.
Thoughts?
Stock seemecnc hotend EZ truder cold end - ABS - 222c 10mm/s first layer - 220c 40mm/s other layers
I bring the temp to 235c and extrude some fresh filament in, nothing comes out a first, then a rush of charred filament comes out and after a few cm it extrudes clean. So now I think I have my clog solved. I print again and it is a blobby mess. Excess filament everywhere. It doesn't seem stringy anywhere. I also see the stepper lose grip on the filament and slip forward occasionally. So i check my extruder calibration. All looks good. I try agin, same thing. The hotend seems to require excessive force to extrude. So I take the thing apart and check the PTFE lining. The inner tube has in fact contracted a tiny bit at the nozzle end. So I ream it out slightly and flip it around so the clean end is at the nozzle. It didn't feel perfect when I just slid some filament through by hand but it did feel better. Now I am getting stringy/blobby prints. The attached photo has the calibration pyramid I did just before the big print failure and the last little fan cowling I tried to print.
I have a E3D hotend on the way as well as some new PTFE tubing. I have messed with the stepper current settings, no help. I have measured the extruded material (in air) and it actually turned out to be .7 from my .5 nozzle, so my nozzle setting may be wrong but if anything it should be easier to extrude through.
I figure it must be either the PTFE or the nozzle causing the problems. I did not have a PEEK fan at the time of the original failure. So I suspect that is when the PTFE lining was damaged and now is too snug to be free and easy flowing. I don't know how the nozzle would become a problem from simply sitting at 220c for a few hours. That's what it does anyway. Oh and I measured the filament diameter after the failure so that is current. I do think my filament was relatively damp. I have since baked it and tried extruding into open air and the extruder still slips (even at 235c when the pyramid was done at 220c). Everything ABS.
Thoughts?