On Wednesday 17 June 2020 03:20:36 Chris Albertson wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 10:18 PM Gene Heskett <ghesk...@shentel.net> 
wrote:
> > Yup.  And it was, feeding about 44mm for 100mm commanded.
> >
> > Sounds like a clogged nozzle or maybe just needs to be hotter.  Or
> > maybe
>
> the temperature sensor is uncalibrated.

Possibly. I have an ir thermometer but thats a very small target.  
Thermistors are very well known so I not be willing to accept more than 
1 degree of error.
> Using less filament than commanded means it is slipping on the feed
> rollers.  There is a pressure adjustment.  On my printer it is a screw
> with a spring and you adjust it to control pressure on the rollers. 

I'd say its sufficient as I almost have to use a pair of pliars to open 
it far enough to feed by hand. So I'd discount that slippage theory.  
The grip is truly a high byte grip.  At the knurled roller, I'd have to 
guess 75-100 lbs of squeeze.  And the rollers knurling is sharp.
 
> But these are the kinds of details that vary from one printer to the
> other.
>
> If this is a mechanical issue you shouldn't try and compensate with a
> software setting.
>
> I'm lucky and never once even after printing many spools of plastic
> had even one clogged nozzle.   Being so lucky means I have zero
> experience with the problem.   But I'd think it is not easy to clear
> it as it would be filled with hard plastic.

Well, I went to bed with it makeing a new 30 tooth outer half sprocket 
for an XL belt.  Its now about 11.5mm up from the bed and I have never 
seen anything like it, the teeth are well shaped and solidly rendered. 
Unless its oversize, in which case I'll go back and make a few more 
5x5's and re-calibrate that, it will be a plumb purty sprocket, 100% 
usable.  Smooth, no loose threads anyplace I can see except some 
slobbering in the base layer.  Looks like solid plastic out of an 
injection die.  Best by far of anything else I've done. Getting it off 
the bed may take some effort though, 225C/75C sticks it way too tight. 
Welded to the polycarb cover sheet is a good description.  Got about an 
hour and a half to go.

Starved for PLA, even 210/65 didn't stick. Recommended 200/60 might even 
work, so cura gets cooled a few for the next slice. The Saintsmart 
manual even uses a 40C bed, but that pdf is 3 years old too.

The first thing I ever did was the waving cat. Outside walls might be a 
10% fill.  So it came OOTB totally fubar.

Oh, and as far as its being spring mounted, no, its solidly bolted to the 
X carriage at the top, I had it all apart just to change the nozzle as 
it was welded in by leakage past the threads and had to be heated above 
185C to get it loose with that toy wrench.

Thanks Chris.

Cheers, Gene Heskett
-- 
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
 - Louis D. Brandeis
Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene>


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