Fourth try on a print. Tried to add some adhesive to the bed to get it to stick better. Watched the first two layers and went to bed. Woke up to a printer on strike.
I had that happen once. it just bout pushed the fan off the head since the clips are broken but it fits good enough™️
OH NO
I don’t see a beginning of a print anywhere, did it not even manage to do the first layer?
If that’s the case, a word of advice to always be present for the first 2 layers of your prints, at least for the longer ones.
I didn’t take the photo immediately - tried cleaning a bit before it occurred to me to document it.
As a seethingly jealous ender 3 peasant who is still spending most of his time keeping my printer working with kludges and duct tape; it’s nice to know Bambu owners are human after all and still run into problems.
Hope you get it sorted and are back printing soon! 🖖
Your fuck up is buying an ender…lol Every problem thread in this sub is about a shit ender
Needlessly asshole-ish.
👍
Haha, my ender is printing at 20mm/s to avoid slippage, with the bed scraper jammed into to filament guide to make it actually grab and feed, and at 105% extrusion, but it’s still chugging along. After a few restarts to get the fan spinning, that it.
Manged to get an ender 3V2 a few years ago, auto bed levelling is a must have feature if you intend to spend more time using your printer than calibrating or fixing it. After that masking tape fixes all adhesion problems.
I must have been lucky with my Ender 3 - I only leveled it every few weeks or less. Very solid printer, had it 5 years.
I eventually turned off auto bed leveling because it just doesn’t help much. You still have to manually level the bed, and the correction it adds is kinda negligible. At least the BL Touch does help with the manual leveling process.
@WolfLink @CheeseNoodle I have and Ender 3 S1. On my old CR10 I had similar opinion to you on the bl touch. Since I upgraded the firmware on the Ender some of the new bed leveling stuff has been a handbags. I couldn’t do without it now. Huge reduction in faff.
What firmware are you using? I’ve tried a couple different ones. I think the biggest issue I encounter is the BL Touch measurements seem really off near the edges of the plate, which makes the mesh corrections over correct. I have found the mesh tool helps me manually level the plate better, which is my current workflow.
And that’s just the bed leveling. My extruder keeps clogging to the point that I have to pause the print to do a cold pull multiple times mid-print to get something bigger than about a cubic inch to print. I’m not sure what’s wrong with it. Maybe it’s crappy filament but I’m worried something else is going on.
After that masking tape fixes all adhesion problems.
Well except the one where the print is TOO stuck to the masking tape. I guess that’s less of an issue if you have a magnetic build plate though. I’m still printing on a old flashforge clone. and removing things can sometimes be a pain in the butt.
I feel you - I ran an Ender 3 for 5 years but now I have an A1 and honestly don’t miss all the endless tinkering. Learned a hell of a lot in the process. No complaints about the Ender, it was a rock solid machine - now it has a new life as a laser engraver, courtesy of the Creality 1.6w laser attachment which works nice.
I’ve run into adhesion problems when the room gets colder.
works 99% of the time, but when ambient temp goes below 70°F everything starts failing.
Interesting. All of my prints that failed were running overnight when the temperature dropped.
What temps are you running your bed at?
Either 65°C or 70°C
Yeah, in some parts of the world, a box surrounding the printer isn’t really a luxury.
Haven’t had problems since I upgraded.
Controlling temperature is important on FDM.
I’ve a massive blob like this one time when the nozzle got clogged and the extruder created enough pressure to push the filament through the threads of the hotend block. It was on an Anet A8 and I ripped a lead off the thermistor trying to get the plastic off so I ended up replacing the entire hotend.
You can try to heat up the hotend to a fair bit under the melting point of the filament to where it’s soft and somewhat pliable but not runny or sticky and then trying to peel it off. Though you’d risk damaging any leads to the thermistor, heater, or your hands if you’re not careful.
Good luck on fixing the printer and getting back to printing again. 3D printing is a really time consuming hobby
Thanks. I am really frustrated with myself for letting this happen. Pulled everything apart and recovered most of everything, but managed to damage the clip that holds the extruder in place, so now I get to learn how to do surgery and replace the entire assembly. I wish I had gotten a bit more time before having to do a major repair…
I had this happen. Pop the whole hotend in the oven on the warm/hold setting for a bit and it should come off fairly easily.
Careful not to break the heating assembly thermostat wires. They’re super delicate, and I managed to break them when removing a blob from my mini a while back.
I’ve had 3 blobs over the years, all caused by an otherwise benign issue turned into that because filament got caught in a silicon sock.
I mean putting a lot of sticky stuff in a sock will usually do that.
I’ve been doing 3D printing regularly for a decade or so now… Never had a blob.
I’ve been printing for two weeks, and I had one.
Apparently the A1 mini is supposed to have a mode to detect this a You just have to enable it.
I don’t think it’s supposed to do that
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that looks like delicious taffy. like an abba zaba
If you use OctoPrint you can get plugins that use a camera to watch for failed prints like stinging etc and it will stop the print if it fails.
I forget the name of the plugins right now. I went to say “Dr” something.
It used to be Spaghetti Detective, but they wanted to be trendy so it’s “Obico” I think now lol
Thanks for adding the extra detail.
I have since noticed OP has only been printing two weeks so perhaps they don’t want to go down this route just yet, but it is another fun project and they will need to print some things to hold the web cam etc so could be something to focus on.
Yeah, it’s not bad! If it’s got a good clean view it can tell you when things start to look a little sus before disaster strikes haha.
It’s even self-hostable, and a modest dedicated graphics card can be used to run the LLM completely locally. I haven’t been able to get that running on my server yet though. (Nvidia drivers. Agh)
Otherwise they’re pretty “freemium”, which is understandable.
I’ve been out of the game lately though. :)
Yup, that’s how I’m using it;)
Thanks for this.
I have been out of the game for a bit too. Saving for a Bambu Labs printer as I spend more time levelling my Ender than printing 😂
O was also thinking about that, but since Bambu is so closed, I’ve started looking into other options and Qidi looks nice too
Never heard of Qidi, thanks for sharing that! Bambu concerns me, frankly, from the “too good to be true in capitalism-land” standpoint.
They’re obviously pretty quality built and do a great job off the shelf, but the closed source software is iffy to me too. I think some are suspicious they just don’t want to reveal they’re basically running tweaked Klipper lol. I’m lured by that temptation of not having to tweak and fiddle for weekends prospect too, but if I can’t touch it at all or know how it works, my Ender3v2 still seems more appealing!
I’m concerned if other companies don’t seriously step up their game, Bambu will reach market saturation and then go for the" enshittification rug pulling to impress investors" special.
Anyway don’t want to be too negative, clearly people are enjoying those machines. But the maker community definitely needs to be ready to raise a riot if Bambu starts taking notes from HP / Apple / John Deere. :)
They’re a bit too reliant on the cloud and the event where „their” printers (that the users both and were using at their homes) re-printed last job because of some server issue was a bit concerning. And definitely the fact that if your printer does have issues you can’t fix/calibrate much without them is alarming to me. I’m using a K1 which might need some work but it’s manageable. If I were looking to upgrade I’d probably get Qidi Q1 Pro - same price ballpark as K1 or P1S, while the features it has seem to be closer to X-series
This was what most annoyed me on my Ender 3. Now with a bambu A1 its fire-and-forget. And no failed prints yet, with daily use.
That’s great to hear! I see a lot of positivity for the Bambu printers.
Yes. These are great machines. Please know, though, that p.e. the camera does inexplicably not work in LAN only mode (i.e. when not connected to the bambu cloud service), and that the AMS lite cannot fit every filament spool in the world due to its construction. First can be remedied with a separate webcam in your LAN, second with printed adaptors, alternative spools or just some squishy material (if the spool’s too big). I found that spools from dasfilament and recent ones from sunlu fit ok.
Nozzle not seated properly?
I just had this happen too and it was caused by a bad z-offset reading. The nozzle hooked one of the parts on the bed that came loose and drug it around while forming the blob.
How did you diagnose that?
or no nozzle?
Hey, ummm… I think I see the problem. Your printer has diarrhea