Comment on Not even the ghost of obsolescence can coerce users onto Windows 11
KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year agoI’ve been walking a friend through starting to print stuff and he uses Arch, so is in turn using Prusa. I find there’s a bunch of settings that are either obfuscated behind one master setting or stuff that’s just plain missing. I’m not going to deny that the slicer itself may be better but I need more options.
bbuez@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Im actually curious what those would be, I’ve been mostly “vanilla” printing, tweaking speed and the likes, only recently tried ironing. And I would hate to be missing out on a cool feature and not even know it lol
KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
I almost forgot.
Prusa hides some of these settings…
imgur.com/a/jmxr3SV
This gives some kickass supports. The settings for the z distance needs to be adjusted according to your layer height. Also, this is an old screenshot, I now use tree supports, but all the support interface settings is what actually counts.
bbuez@lemmy.world 1 year ago
And that would explain a lot of the behaviors I could’ve probably tweaked with cura… thanks!
KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
Nah, nothing cool or interesting unfortunately, it’s things like extrusion widths (AFAIK there’s just an extrusion multiplier in Prusa)
I mainly use it to get badass supports and rafts that leave the bottom of the print looking good. The trick is, on the top layers of the support material, have the lines less than a mm apart, then under extrude it dramatically, this leaves a really brittle but quite solid layer that doesn’t tend to stick to the print very well but gives good support.
I’ll see if I can find the screenshot I took of all my support settings if you’re interested.