3DPrinting
3DPrinting is a place where makers of all skill levels and walks of life can learn about and discuss 3D printing and development of 3D printed parts and devices.
The r/functionalprint community is now located at: or !functionalprint@fedia.io
There are CAD communities available at: !cad@lemmy.world or !freecad@lemmy.ml
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For records, this is the model in Freecad and how it is sliced in BambuStudio
@gdaofb27584 According to object rotation I don't think it's printing issue, but nozzle hit the model and rotated it
You are right ! I did a second try, with a different preset "0.08 High Quality". It also failed.
The timelaps show the hotend hitting the model base. ( see this streamable ) It's the first time it happens, I don't know what to do to fix it 🤔
Looking at your video, that's definitely a nozzle collision issue. Try enabling "Z hop when retracted" in your slicer settings (should be under travel options). This will make the nozzle lift slightly when moving between parts, preventing it from hitting your model. Also, for models with such a small footprint, consider adding a brim for better bed adhesion - looks like the impact is knocking it loose from the bed.
I might be seeing it wrong, hard to tell from just this perspective, but could it be placed so the entire side, or entire back, is making contact with the bed? Increasing your contact surface can help dramatically as I said in my other reply.
Did you check preview mode on slicer? Do you use your own settings? Is purge line always that long?
I use factory preset "0.2mm standard" for a 0.4mm hotend. The purge line looks normal to me. I had an other comment with bambustudio and freecad files.
Looking again at your pic and wonder if part tilted while printing due to small area on bed. If it did, adding manual support to the print would help to stabilise as it goes up. Only thing is, that doesn't explain why there is filament on the right of the picture.
Have you tuned/dried the filament? As others suggested, you may want to add additional supports and slow the printing speed down.
The print itself looks pretty mint, apart from the failure. If you don't have hot end leakage around the screws this looks like a design / orientation placement error
Check your bed adhesion (clean the bed with detergent and hot water, and I recommend a quick wipe with 91% IPA before each print) to prevent the model rotation seen in this picture, but in general parts with that little bed contact can be difficult to print correctly. If you can’t find an orientation that fits on the bed with more surface area, then slow the print down to minimize forces pushing the print. While supports help, they don’t hold onto the print as firmly as the bed does (on purpose).
I’ve run into some frustrating issues with small contact points with print beds. Another option is to use a smooth PEI plate and use a glue stick or Bed Weld or something to help improve adhesion.