Printing here with eSun PLA at 215 C on a Prusa Mini, and there are lots of hairline strings.
What’s causing those strings? Temp too low?
Submitted 11 months ago by PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world to 3dprinting@lemmy.world
https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2408222f-a68a-417f-8ddf-75f2e8366f0f.jpeg
Printing here with eSun PLA at 215 C on a Prusa Mini, and there are lots of hairline strings.
What’s causing those strings? Temp too low?
Try dehydrateding your pla first. Then try some of these other suggestions. If all else fails, these clean up really nicely with a butane blow torch.
Haven’t printed too much, so take my comment with a grain of salt. But I don’t think the temperature is the problem. I notice that I get strings when I set my slicer to not do retraction. I guess that makes sense intuitively - strings are just plastic where they shouldn’t be, and the best way to prevent that is to make sure to retract the plastic away from the print.
Also, I think 215 is slightly high, or at least higher than what I use
I can’t add anything concerning stringing that the other comment didn’t already cover, so I’ll ask about the gaps.
Have you tried upping the flow rate to fill them in? The other option I’ve used in the past was lowering my Z Offset if the flow was alright.
Keep in mind that changing your flow rate will likely also cause you have to mess with your retraction settings again.
empireOfLove@lemmy.one 11 months ago
Often a combination of temp too high, not enough retraction, or water contaminated filament.
If the plastic in the hot end is too hot it will keep “running” out of the nozzle after retraction and you’ll get strings. Similarly if you don’t retract enough to actually pull plastic out of the nozzle it will want to keep pulling thru. This is supported by the little blobs it leaves on that angled surface corner its travelling to when stringing, thats excess material squeezing out during its rapid moves.
And if there’s water in your filament all bets are off on how it’ll behave.
215 is pretty warm for that esun PLA especially if you’re using the stock brass nozzle, try bumping that down to 205 or even 200, and increase your retraction speed and distance settings in prusaslicer a tiny amount (0.1mm distance, 2mm/s speed at a time until you see improvement is plenty)
lysdexic@programming.dev 11 months ago
This guy 3Dprints.
What a treat of a post. This is why I subscribe to !3dprinting@lemmy.world
empireOfLove@lemmy.one 11 months ago
Hell yeah I do. I help run the makerspace at my college. I’ve fixed damn near every problem a Prusa can have at this point lol
PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Thank you! <3 The print finished and now I am running a temp tower to check what works better than what I had. I would then work on adjusting the retraction, too. Also, this filament is straight out of the factory wrap so it should be dry enough.
CmdrShepard@lemmy.one 11 months ago
Something else that contributes to stringing is using Z-hop as there’s nothing to wipe the nozzle clean. My printer is calibrated well and I still get stringing when using Z-hop.
candyman337@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Great advice
candyman337@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Based on the layers of his print I’d say he also needs to level his bed
PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world 11 months ago
What you’re seeing is actually a sort of staircase with shadows, because that right-hand part of the print is angled a few degrees up. So it only looks bad in this lighting, but it’s fine.
See the left side of the base, that’s really flat and is fine.