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Failed to link to the pics.
My first print was a small "cali dog", 2nd another dog, much bigger, the code came with the machine and is set at very fine detail, got 3.5hrs into a 5hr print, all looking good and then it decided to move. Not sure why? Very frustrating!
The little "cali dog" that printed OK.

Headless Dog Beast

What are you using for bed adhesion?
Does the Ender3 come with a rough build plate surface, or just plain glass?
What bed temp were you printing with?
The prints look ok to be honest, although the foot of the headless dog has some stray bits so it looks like maybe your first layer adhesion wasnt great.
The hardest thing i found to get started was the bed levelling and the gap between the nozzle and print bed at the zero position (at zero Z height). If your first layer is too high, it will not adhere well and as the print progresses, there is a risk it will detach.
What are you using for bed adhesion?
I din't for the first 2.
However, I went and bought some hairspray which seems to of done the trick.
Printed the 1st part of a Sherman tank this morning, hull printing now, seems OK.

As above, something not right with that first layer on the failed print. In my limited experience, the first layer is key so watch it carefully & if it isn’t perfect, abort the print, recalibrate, then try again.
Also if there’s a limited contact area with the bed on the first layer, use your slicer to add a brim which effectively makes the first layer a lot bigger. This has helped me quite a bit with trickier prints.
Properly got the 3D printing bug now! Here are a couple of bigger projects I was killing time with over Xmas (not my designs).
I've also done quite a few of the community recommended hardware mods/add ons, the best of which was definitely adding a Raspberry Pi running Octoprint (awesomely useful program) as a print server/remote webcam thing. Initially didn't want to become a "3d print guy" who spent loads of time printing stuff for the printer, but I've actually got really into it & since I've moved it to work I like to keep it busy the whole time so people can see it working when they come in, so at least it's making useful stuff rather than random crap that's just going to end up in landfill 😃
Been trying a few different filament types too, been most impressed by Ninjaflex so far, really cool. Got a sample of a copper one to try but apparently need a hardened nozzle for that so haven't tried it out yet.
https://imgur.com/JW0Ur54
https://imgur.com/E4cMTQw
Wow! How was the T-Rex to print? It's on my to-do list, but looks like there are many potential areas for failure.
I haven't really done any mods - the only one was a knob that attached to the z-axis lead screw so you can wind it up & down easily.
I have several in the pipeline, but no time to do them. I want to swap the cooling fan to a fang design, which apparently helps a lot with cooling on the CR10. I also want to modify the control box to add some large PC fans underneath & get rid of the noisy ones in the control box itself that run on bushes - one of mine is on the way out, so I should probably do that soon.
How many colours of filament have you got now?! I am slowly building up some stock - I have white, black, red, green, blue, silver (still unused) and translucent purple! All PLA.
I've not tried PETG or anything else yet. Have you?
The only 'trinket' print I have done so far was a sabre tooth tiger skull on Thingiverse that turned out really well. Someone has done a remix of it with column supports that worked perfectly.
[url= https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1834/30031273378_c2690d0f13_c.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1834/30031273378_c2690d0f13_c.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/MKL8iu ]IMG_20180729_214009[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/me96kka/ ]STW stumpy01[/url], on Flickr
I won't lie, the T-Rex was trouble! It was the first tricky/big thing I tried to print & I had a lot of failures. I used the remix "T-Rex fixed & printable" (or something) rather than the original but it's still probably a perfect example of what shapes you [I]don't[/I] really want to 3D print - loads of overhangs, tiny narrow bits etc. It was an excellent learning experience though, in bed adhesion for tricky prints, using brims/supports, etc.
Part cooling definitely has an impact on print quality so it's worth looking at, although it's mainly cosmetic I think. You can tell which way round certain things have been printed on mine, particularly if there are overhangs on the back!
Got quite a few different colours now, I've bought 6 or 7 spools in basic colours but I've got loads of 10m ish samples from 3dfilaprint in colours I wouldn't (yet!) want a full spool of like luminous pink, sparkly blue, etc etc. Bought a full spool of Polyalchemy Elixir gold though which is expensive but REALLY nice. I've successfully printed in some basic PETG that I got with the machine, trying my first print literally right now in Spoolworks Edge which they say is a "PET/Copolyester blend" and apparently much stronger than regular PETG. It's not cheap but I need to make some strong clips for a commercial job so hopefully it'll be up to it!
That skull came out great, nice level of detail & only a minimal bit of banding on the fangs from what I can see. Some of my T-Rex bits are not that nice if you look closely! (That's the advantage of a massive print though, people go "oooooh!" and don't look to close lol)
That skull came out great, nice level of detail & only a minimal bit of banding on the fangs from what I can see.
Yeah, there is a bit of banding, but for some reason this really seems to be emphasised in pictures. It's not really that noticeable in the flesh.
It's definitely a print to try if you want something to impress people. The teeth print separately so need to be glued in, but fit well & have sensible sized sprues on the main skull.
I would probably print it larger than 100% to give it a bit more impact.
Regarding materials other than PLA - we have tried all sorts of things at work on our Ultimaker - the main protagonist for getting a work 3-D printer is trying to get it used for production parts, so it looking for 'engineering plastics'.
Nylon prints well, but you need to keep it dry. We bought a Makerbot dry box which made a massive difference.
We've also had good success with PETG & polycarbonate, although polycarbonate was a bugger to get off the build plate & we had some warping problems.
Each material requires a whole new learning period for good results that I just don't have the time (or inclination) to bother with at home. I'll get round to trying PETG one day, perhaps!
Yeah the reason I've mainly stuck to PLA & PETG is they're very easy to print. I have actually got a nylon sample to try but not gotten around to it yet. TPU is tricky but I wanted to try it because it's unique. It's virtually indestructible I think because of the give! I'll get a spool of one of the harder/hybrid variants at some point which are supposed to be almost as easy as PLA to print although a lot less flexible than e.g. Ninjaflex.
Couldn't find the Makerbot dry box when I googled - is that one that actively dries the filament? On the forums I've seen a lot of home-made versions using food dehydrators (which are a lot more popular/cheaper in the US). I bought a Polymaker Polybox which is basically something you could knock up yourself (I just wanted something I could start using quickly). It's just a box with some bearings to hold the spools & some big packets of desiccant to keep it dry, with PTFE tube coming out. I printed a reverse-bowden (think that's what it's called!!) setup for my printer so the whole run from the Polybox to the extruder is in PTFE tube.
The best thing about the Prusa (I'm sure it's the same for other popular hobby printers too) is there's a massive community driving it forward, with a wealth of knowledge so I haven't had to figure too much out myself via trial and error. Been spending way more time on the Prusa FB groups than here at the moment! For example, someone was able to come up with modified firmware a couple of weeks ago that upgraded the automatic bed-levelling algorithm from 3x3 points (good, but still requires manual bed levelling for most people to be able to use the full bed consistently) to 7x7 which has made a MASSIVE difference to the full bed print quality on mine without the need for any manual levelling. (So much so Prusa are integrating it into the next official firmware release!)
Couldn’t find the Makerbot dry box when I googled
HA HA. It's a Polymaker Polybox....all these names sound alike after a while.
It's a lot of money for a plastic box with some bearings in it, but I suppose it's an all in one solution. It's definitely improved the printability of PVA for support material.
That's the exact one I bought! It looks smart & it works really well. Yeah you could build a cheaper one but I weighed up buying a decent box, bearings, rods, desiccant, PTFE tube, grommets, hygrometer, plus printing & assembly time then clicked a button and one turned up next day 😃
Pretty pleased with myself now! A couple of new bearings & a new blade which I modelled, printed in PETG & superglued on and I have saved myself the £150 a replacement fan unit would've cost!
£150 for a fan!
Holy Shit! My printer only cost £225!
Good job though!
It’s not for a 3D printer, it’s for a 40W laser 😀
Stumpy, let us know how you get on with the control box fan replacements, i'm thinking of doing the same thing and it's hard deciding which fan setup to go with. Also thinking about the stepper dampeners but don't want to lose any detail/accuracy.
It's hard choosing a fang too. The one i have uses the existing fans but i think maybe one with a 5015 blower for the part cooling and a 4020 heatbreak fan might be the way to go.. although I'm not sure on adding extra weight to the x carriage, surely it's not good?
Stumpy, let us know how you get on with the control box fan replacements
Will do, but don't necessarily expect a quick turnaround! Have very little time to fiddle about with the printer, so have been putting up with a noisy fan for a while now...
It’s hard choosing a fang too. The one i have uses the existing fans but i think maybe one with a 5015 blower for the part cooling and a 4020 heatbreak fan might be the way to go.. although I’m not sure on adding extra weight to the x carriage, surely it’s not good?
My main issues are:
1) I really only print in PLA and am still unconvinced it's a good idea right near the hot end of the printer.
2) many of the fangs seem to rely on screwing into the PLA and there are many tales of people's fangs/hotends becoming loose after a while.
Again, it's something I'd like to do, but really struggle with finding suitable time.
I'd probably swap to one of the 5015 blower fans, but you need to be careful which one you go for as some don't seem to allow any speed control, so they are either on or off!
Automatic fan control is nicer but you can change the speed of pretty much any fan by sticking a cheap voltage stepdown in the circuit. TBH my cooling printer is pretty much always full speed or off anyway.
I printed my original one in PLA and it's been fine but yep definite room for issues with crushing and loosening- on my ender the entire thing ends up held on with 2 M3 bolts which is a bit suboptimal especially with 2 fans on it. But it does work, if you do it right, and with my one you can get an allen key to the bolts without taking the fan off so tweaking was easy while it was bedding in.
Going to redo it all in petg anyway but I've been suprised by how well the pla one worked.
I'm thinking of moving my CR10 mini on. It's not had much use and I'm not finding the time to model or use it.
If anyone is looking for a decent printer that won't break the back in the Midlands areas then drop me a line
Not exactly a PSA, but, 3dlac spray + glass + heated bed = PLA happiness. Sticks perfect, then when the bed cools it just comes off. No need to respray, no effort, just proper simple results, lovely.
@slackman, I'd be tempted if I was closer, nice machine that!
Printed some parts for the ender in petg which didn't go as well as I'd hoped, I think maybe I'm overextruding. I got functional parts but they're not pretty. But had some stuff I wanted to do for wargames terrain for a mate so switched back to PLA for a bit and ended up speeding the print speed right up and doing my biggest print yet, dead pleased. It's nothing to shout about really but 18 hours without a flutter. Just set off my first ever print over 24.
Hmmm. I'd also be tempted by the CR10-MINI if I had somewhere to put it! I'll have a think!
Not exactly a PSA, but, 3dlac spray + glass + heated bed = PLA happiness. Sticks perfect, then when the bed cools it just comes off. No need to respray, no effort, just proper simple results, lovely.
We use 3dlac on the Ultimaker at work and it is very good stuff. I'm convinced it's just repackaged hairspray though.
Slackman - sent you a DM re the cr10 mini
stumpy01
We use 3dlac on the Ultimaker at work and it is very good stuff. I’m convinced it’s just repackaged hairspray though.
It's made by a hairspray manufacturer (their branding is on the tin) but I couldn't find any of their products that's the same, I suspect it might genuinely be super-hairspray designed for the job. Makes sense really.
This thing is proving genuinely useful! Some scrote nicked the fuel flap from one of our transits. Did consider trying to print a new one, but it’s bigger than my print area, and more complex that you might think at first glance. If it happened again I’d try though, as a new one from Ford was £48!! When I came to fit it I realised they’d snapped part of the hinge mechanism too. Good learning experience modelling that, feel quite confident with Fusion now. And it fitted first time!
https://imgur.com/a/qbJeCE7
Got an Ender 3 for Xmas
finally got round to trying it out today
leveling wasnt too bad
did a an xyz cube, seemed pretty good


now browsing thingverse, hmmm
Cube looks good - the Ender3 seems like a solid machine, especially for the money!
Did you measure the x, y & Z dims? I think my first ones were coming out almost spot-on in X & Y, but Z was about 0.2 short.
I am not sure I like the sharp cubes for calibration purposes as you get an inevitable small bulge in the corners where the head changes direction, which can give you measurement error - IMO it would be better to have a small radius on the vertical corners & top face, with a chamfer on the bottom face.
now browsing thingverse, hmmm
Eeek! Lots to be distracted by! I've got several items 'collected' that I keep meaning to print - there's a fantastic jet engine model & someone has recently put a working large clockwork mechanism that I think would be a great showpiece.
The Swiss-watch with escapement mechanism thing that's on the featured section? Looks great, definitely on my very long list! I've actually got a sample of PLA with copper in it, would look cool in that I think, need to get a hardened nozzle first before I can test it out though!someone has recently put a working large clockwork mechanism that I think would be a great showpiece.
The Swiss-watch with escapement mechanism thing that’s on the featured section?
That's the one!
Here's a few things on my list to print:
Jet Engine
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1327093
Gyrotourbillon
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2820444
Dremel Table Saw
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2365532
Star Tracker for night photography
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:974906
This is my most successful (very boring) upload; a small test piece to trial support settings:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2823038
I've only uploaded 3 items so far & am reluctant to put loads of stuff on there after seeing how many people seem to just use it for downloading stuff to sell on Etsy or eBay.
Also, since uploading that test piece it's been downloaded >2000 times, but only 2 people have bothered to post makes of it. I try to post makes of every part I download & subsequently make.
I've seen it appear on loads of 'how to' videos on Youtube.
Did you measure the x, y & Z dims? I think my first ones were coming out almost spot-on in X & Y, but Z was about 0.2 short.
I dont have any calipers, but it seemed very close on my rule
I bought slackman's CR10 Mini off him at the weekend.
Tried some prints yesterday, and need some advice to work out what went wrong on the final one. First print I didn't put any pritstick down so the print dislodged and sprayed PLA everywhere. Second print I managed to tangle the PLA filament into a knot so it ended up printing air. Third one worked, but I broke the head off the model when trying to pull it off the piece of glass, wasn't being particularly aggressive with it either.... so i'm thinking the layer didn't join properly - here are some pictures:
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Kind of looks like the layers haven't joined together properly - i just used the default for PLA setting. Not sure what the brand of filament is, as Slackman gave me it free. It's black, and it's PLA.
Any ideas?
Ewan Member
I bought slackman’s CR10 Mini off him at the weekend.
Tried some prints yesterday, and need some advice to work out what went wrong on the final one
Where did you get the model from? Was it on the included USB pen? If so, delete it & try something else.
That cat model isn't called decapicat for nothing - seriously, google it.
Creality released corrupted/faulty gcode for that model & caused people no end of grief who spent ages trying to work out why the print kept failing. You've done well to get the head to print at all!
Try a Benchy & see how you get on.
Did you measure the x, y & Z dims? I think my first ones were coming out almost spot-on in X & Y, but Z was about 0.2 short.
That's quite common and not necessarily a fault. It might simply be due to squashing the first layer onto the bed (which PLA likes).
You could test by printing something 40mm high and see if the disparity is still 0.2mm or scaled double. If doubled to 0.4mm, then it needs calibrating.
You can actually compensate for the squished first layer in some slicers, but I don't tend to bother.
There is also a compensation setting for 'elephant's foot' where it prints the first layer slightly smaller in the X and Y dimensions so that you don't get that squished-out bottom.
That cat model isn’t called decapicat for nothing – seriously, google it.
Creality released corrupted/faulty gcode for that model & caused people no end of grief who spent ages trying to work out why the print kept failing. You’ve done well to get the head to print at all!
Yeah, i'd read about the headless cat thing, but i downloaded this from thingyverse and the comments were full of people saying that the cat had a head in this one.
That said, it is weird it seems to be a single poor layer, will try and print a benchy. Is there a 'standard' one I should download the gcode for?
You could test by printing something 40mm high and see if the disparity is still 0.2mm or scaled double. If doubled to 0.4mm, then it needs calibrating.
Funnily enough, I stuck this on Thingiverse for just that purpose, although annoyingly got my axes muddled up, so it needs re-orienting on the bed to print correctly
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2837841
That said, it is weird it seems to be a single poor layer, will try and print a benchy. Is there a ‘standard’ one I should download the gcode for?
There is really only one Benchy, although many people have created versions.
This should be it:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:763622
Generally you download the stl file & then create the gcode yourself using Cura, or some other slicer software.
I might have a sliced version I could e-mail you, as I also have a CR-10 Mini but it won't be until this evening at the earliest.
Drop me a message with your e-mail details if you want me to have a look and see what gcode i have ready sliced.
Re: Decapicat (yours doesn't look like the traditional shifted layer one).
If it was just one poor layer, then look at your z leadscrew for any debris - same with the wheels that slide up the verticals.
Also check where the gantry goes up the vertical supports and check that screws aren't fouling anything. One of the plastic coloured inserts on mine was rubbing against a screw, so I shaved it down a bit.
Same for the wires and bowden tube - make sure it couldn't have snagged on anything while Z was travelling up.
Other things that can trigger it: Sudden change in ambient temp. Sudden change in nozzle temp - some people complain that the CR-10 (don't know about the mini) can't hold temps stead).
If you do print something else, check at the same z-height for any weirdness.
Ok good tips thanks!
Just to follow on from Alex's post...
One of the plastic coloured inserts on mine was rubbing against a screw, so I shaved it down a bit.
I don't think that the Mini shipped with the plastic go-faster stripes as standard, if that's what you mean. I could be wrong, but have never seen one (and I watched plenty of youtube reviews before buying) and my one came without.
some people complain that the CR-10 (don’t know about the mini) can’t hold temps stead).
Could be an issue; but I'd be surprised at PLA temps, based on how my Mini performs.
Mine won't hold temp when you get up to PETG + higher temps. It hunts around like mad. Needs that capacitor re-work on the main motherboard. Gearbest sent me a replacement board, but it's the same. I keep intending to mod one, try it out & if it works mod the second one.
My longest print so far was 27hrs & that had no obvious issues relating to temp fluctuations.
Ewan - did you scroll through the layers for that part in Cura? You can often see areas where prints might go squiffy based on hoe the layer view looks. It should be easy enough to look at the layers around where the failure occurred & see if the gcode does something a bit weird.
Regarding Alex's comments about checking the Z-screw - I don't generally agree with making tons of mods to a machine until you know how it performs as stock, so you understand what affects any changes will have......but having said that, there is a z-screw mod that allows you to wind the z-screw quickly and it's definitely worth doing.
Here: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2534990
That Jet Engine looks really good!
... Didn't realise it was going to be so big.. Mine shows about 60 hours to print, if I had a build plate big enough to print all of them at once! 😮 I won't be printing it. 🙁
I didn't look through cura - i litterally downloaded some gcode and hit go 🙂
I'll take a look tonight. Is the issue with the print head common to the CR-10 or a quality control issue? I was hoping to upgrade the head and print in ABS and Nylon eventually. Figured i'd work out whats what with PLA first tho.
I’ll take a look tonight. Is the issue with the print head common to the CR-10 or a quality control issue? I was hoping to upgrade the head and print in ABS and Nylon eventually. Figured i’d work out whats what with PLA first tho.
It's related to voltage regulation on the motherboard - but that's about as far as I can tell you - electronics is far from my strong point.
The fix is to get some suitable capacitors soldered onto the motherboard. TH3D offer a repair service, but only in the US.
See this link here:
My board looks like the one in the second pic down - the one with the white plug in the centre which is outlined in red. Supposedly swapping that plug out for a suitable capacitor fixes it.
I wasn't going to do it until had a back-up, so I managed to get a replacement board from Gearbest, so if I make the mod & it buggers something up i have a back-up.
My issue is, I am only printing in PLA so there's no real incentive at the moment. And to remove the board will mean labelling it all up & taking my time over it, which I just don't have.
We print in nylon at work, which isn't too bad to use apart from you really need a dry box to keep it in while printing. It absorbs moisture readily & you will get really bad results with wet filament.
Not tried ABS, but most people online who use ABS generally build an enclosure around the printer to keep the temps up to stop it warping.
You might need an all metal hotend when printing the higher temp filaments as the PTFE tube in the CR10 hot-end is only good up to around 245 deg. C. Above that it degrades & will give you issues.
Yeah i'd read I needed a new temperature proof bit, and I was planning on printing some corner bits for an enclosure. Is it to keep the temperature up, or just steady? I have a load of insulation from my camper build I could use potentially. Had figured I'd need a dry box, but those don't seem megabucks.
That fix on the motherboard looks easy enough, i'll pull mine apart at some point and see which variant of the board I have.
Need to get component printing with normal stuff first. Dave chucked in a reel of PETG as well, though that might be impacted by this capacitor issue.
Yeah i’d read I needed a new temperature proof bit, and I was planning on printing some corner bits for an enclosure. Is it to keep the temperature up, or just steady? I have a load of insulation from my camper build I could use potentially. Had figured I’d need a dry box, but those don’t seem megabucks.
I think it is to keep the temperature of the whole part elevated. ABS shrinks a lot as it cools & if the part cools unevenly it can warp or just pull itself apart.
You also need to get the bed temperature up to ~100 degrees C. which I think can be challenging on the Creality printers without an enclosure.
From what I have seen, people have made enclosures from virtually anything - including just sticking a cardboard box over the whole thing.
ABS also gives of quite a lot of fumes from what I understand. It is a good idea to have some kind of ventilation in place.
There is a plastic called ASA, which has similar properties to ABS but gives of a lot less fumes apparently.
Do you really need to print ABS? Not something I've done personally, seems like there are loads of disadvantages (fumes, warping, needing enclosure, environmental impact) and you'd be better served by PETG or even HTPLA maybe?
"ABS also gives of quite a lot of fumes from what I understand. It is a good idea to have some kind of ventilation in place."
Not really tbh, you might notice a slight smell if you've got it running open in a room but in an enclosure, you notice a smell when you open the door but that's all. No need for ventilation imo, not on a diy machine anyway
But an enclosure does make all the difference for printing without warping. It really depends what you're printing- ABS is great in a lot of ways as you can acetone polish it, it glues well, it's pretty heat resistant- PETG has some hangups of its own including not really being able to paint it (if you care) and it being pretty hard to glue to and remove supports from.
FWIW I've had zero problems with removing supports from PETG or gluing it (with superglue). The best tip I've picked up for using supports recently is to always make sure they're at 45 degrees relative to what you're printing, makes them WAY easier to remove.
The PLA is this stuff: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B073PB9XWY/ref=oh_aui_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
and the PETG is:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B01MG5QQY9/ref=oh_aui_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Cheers Slackman.
Had a bit more success last night - was a bit naughty and changed multiple variables at the same time:
- Tried printing the cat again using the same gcode. It broke in almost the same point and i noticed the print had stopped binding together at the top, so cancelled the print.
- The print not binding together and a bit of chin scratching made me think that one of the problems was that the feed reel was on top of the machine - this gave a fairly sharp angle into the feeder tube. So i dismounted the reel and mounted it to the side of the machine on top of the control box - this now gives a straight line into the feeder thingy.
- I also downloaded he STL(?) file and shoved it into Cura and resliced it using the defaults of PLA on the CR-10 (doesn't have the mini, but i'm assuming they're essentially the same other than volume).
- I then printed the cat again (my version) - at this point I noticed bed temp and hot end temp had both increased by 10 degrees over the original gcode - now printing at 200 degrees and 60 degree bed temp.
- The cat worked, so I also printed the benchy thingy. That seems to have come out ok, tho i've not had the calipers out yet to check the measurements. The name plate at the back doesn't seem to have come out at all - not sure if that is the nozzle size or the layer height that's done that (think i used 0.2 - the middle setting in cura).
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Note that the top layers didn't stick together, i think this may have been a feed issue due to the position of the spool. Also see that it snapped in the same point as the last one.
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Success! Can not rip this ones head off despite trying.
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Note artifact on the side of the boat towards the bottom and the middle - looks like little bumps - not sure what's caused that. There is something similar on the other side but not in quite the same place.
May try and print some upgrades for he printer next.
Re: the comments above about ABS, i was thinking of using it for UV resistance so I can use it on the outside of my camper van, or at least places it will be exposed to strong (And hot) sunshine. Ultimately I want to get nylon working once I upgrade the hotend.
Good that you're making progress!
If you want to try my cura PLA profile, it's here. No promises 🙂 Keep it separate and you can always switch back. (it's for the CR-10).
You'll have to alter some of the things you normally decide 'per print' like support, infill, brim etc. If you were just using a default Cura profile, you should notice that the time estimates are much more accurate with this as it's got correct jerk/acceleration figures.
Cool will do - is it obvious how to load it?
I think so! - I don't want to open Cura right now because Adobe Premiere is eating every last drop of cpu
I'll have a look later. Will feedback!
Ewan Member
Cool will do – is it obvious how to load it?
Simple. Open Cura>Preferences>configure Cura>Profiles & then import.....you can save it as a new profile.
Super thanks
Anyone use a cheap ip cam for monitoring? What you got? Same question for wifi plug.
Love the look of some of these silk/satin filaments, gold etc. Any recommendations?
Well 2nd print is running
Might have got a bit ambitious....
Printing a 💀 flowerpot been running overnight & still only 1/3rd of the way through.
Should have checked a bit closer, its more skull than pot
It's ok wife's birthday is on Friday, so should be ready by then !

papamountain
Member
Anyone use a cheap ip cam for monitoring? What you got? Same question for wifi plug.
I use an old Android phone with a camera viewer app. It only works over the house wi-fi though, but I'm generally at home when prints are running.
It’s ok wife’s birthday is on Friday
A bright orange skull flowerpot. I'm sure she'll love it! ;o)
I also bought her a new steam mop
I am a smooth operator
I use a Raspberry Pi 3B+ with the official Pi cam (about £60 for both). Not the cheapest, but it's a very neat setup plus you can run OctoPrint on the Pi as a print server which is an amazingly useful bit of software.Anyone use a cheap ip cam for monitoring?
I've been using Polyalchemy Elixir which looks great! Everyone on the FB 3d printing groups raves about CC3D Silk, don't think it's readily available in the UK though unfortunately as I'd love to try some.Love the look of some of these silk/satin filaments, gold etc. Any recommendations?
Same as zilog... Pi3B+ & Pi Cam, running Octoprint with a Pi touchscreen. I don't have a WiFi plug for the printer, but it seems like a good idea, especially if you need an emergency stop. I also use Telegram plugin so it sends me a message & photo when it starts/finishes/pauses, you can set it to send updates during a print too. You can also send commands via Telegram to pause/stop/etc.
How have you mounted the pi cam to pi and pi to the printer? Any pictures of the set up?
Have a look on Thingiverse, there are loads of Pi cases & camera mounts. Obviously depends on your particular printer!
I had a fancy segmented, articulated arm to hold the camera at first (still visible on the pic attached to the left Z motor!) but actually in practice it wasn't great, the Pi cam has no autofocus so you need it a fixed distance really. Now using a much simpler mount which attaches to the front left corner of the bed, way better for monitoring/timelapses etc.
I did have my Pi case attached to the frame but I've taken it off at the moment as I added a relay module to control the lights I've stuck onto the inside of the frame so need to come up with an integrated mounting solution for that as well. I think I will end up printing a new extended front control panel, with space for a touchscreen for the Pi as well as the Pi itself & the relay module. This will neaten up the cable routing for the camera as well now I've got that mounted at the front.
How have you mounted the pi cam to pi and pi to the printer?
Ummm.. Not very well! I designed a mount for my Printer/PiCam. The problem is the PiCam focal distance seems to be 50cm and I need it to be 20-25cm. I tend to get blurry photos, also the FOV isn't great, so unless I'm printing dead centre, you only see a little bit of the print.
Did you know you can adjust it? At least on the v2 cam. You can carefully rotate the lens, or there's a little tool you can buy for a quid (or print!!) that fits over it to do it.The problem is the PiCam focal distance seems to be 50cm and I need it to be 20-25cm.
Thanks. Not too bothered about messing with raspberries and pies at the moment 😉 Just not sure which cheap ip cam to get. As always there's good and bad comments about them all on amazon.
At the moment i use a webcam connected to my pc using yawcam but id rather not have to have my pc running. I'll just take a pot shot on one probably.
I've been trying to source the cc3d filament but not much joy in the UK. The polyalchemy stuff looks pretty nice but pricey! The Polyalchemy merlot looks very nice and the silver and the purple rain. Got any pics of something you printed with it?
IP Cam wise, I have a couple of yi cam 1080p dome cams - they're very good (don't use them with the printer tho).
I tried to get octopi working last night - got it all installed on the pi ok, but it's not detecting the printer (CR10 Mini) when i plug it in - any ideas?
This is one of my favourite prints, aesthetically & functionally. It's a really well designed (not by me!!) business card holder, the faceted design works awesomely with silky filaments as it catches the light beautifully when you pick it up. Photo doesn't really do it justice! Agree the filament is expensive, but for the right print you can't beat it IMO.The Polyalchemy merlot looks very nice and the silver and the purple rain. Got any pics of something you printed with it?
https://imgur.com/a/1il2hUC
My printer (not a CR10) only connects reliably when serial/baudrate settings are both AUTO and you add a pause before baud rate detection in the settings menu. Also apparently cheap USB cables are a common problem. Failing that, the OctoPrint FB group is very active, someone on there can probably help.I tried to get octopi working last night – got it all installed on the pi ok, but it’s not detecting the printer (CR10 Mini) when i plug it in – any ideas?
Yeah i wonder if it's the cable - i've ordered a couple of ones off fleabay.
Printing he fang mod today.
@ stumpy01
Used your thingiverse calibration test to tweak my Ender 3
Nice and simple. (posted a make as SpuggyDee)
@ stumpy01
Used your thingiverse calibration test to tweak my Ender 3
Nice and simple. (posted a make as SpuggyDee)
Ha! Nice One. I got a notification earlier and wondered if it was someone from here!
Thanks zilog6128. Is that Polyalchemy Elixir Gold Rush? Looks good.
I had Astroprint running and connected for a while with the cable that you've got. It took me a little while to get it to connect to the printer and it was all to do with the baud rate. As soon as I typed in the correct value everything connected within a few seconds. I can't remember what the rate actually was but might be worth checking that you have the correct rate set in Octoprint
Managed to model the snowdown horseshoe in Blender, then extrude in Fusion, and then slice in Cura.
I probably should have saved a link; perhaps I have somewhere....but I found a website that lets you create 3-D geometry of any location in the world. You can add a vertical scaling factor etc. & export it - probably as an stl. I meant to do a few places, but have never got round to it.
I'll have to try & dig out the link.
Your print of Snowdon looks good; what layer height were you printing at?
Oh, and this one lets you change the aspect ratio of the bounding box that might be useful.
http://touchterrain.geol.iastate.edu/
If you want to cut out a whole country, there is some info here:
https://www.prusaprinters.org/how-to-print-maps-terrains-and-landscapes-on-a-3d-printer/
and a website that appears to let you download svg files of countries, that are mentioned in the link above, for cutting out an entire country:
If you scroll back some pages, you can find my map work and some instructions.
It's based on LIDAR data from the government. Each file is a square km. I found the number of triangles too much to edit in fusion though, so I printed them as 1sqkm tiles and turned it into a puzzle:
[url= https://farm1.staticflickr.com/791/39464865950_15470e403b_b.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm1.staticflickr.com/791/39464865950_15470e403b_b.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/238nKHh ]Relief-map-14[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/thingswelike/ ]Alex Simon[/url], on Flickr
yup! Itching to try another colour but I'll wait until I've got something worthy to print!Is that Polyalchemy Elixir Gold Rush?
Quick Q for the 3DP Boffins of the forum, if I may? Not world ending, but I'd like to find a fix.
My printer (or more likely Cura) settings have been a bit off since day 1. Prints are not centred on the print bed on the Y Axis - I have to drag the model towards the very front of the bed in Cura in order to get the resulting print somewhere close to the middle of the bed. I'd guess it was somewhere in the region of 60mm off.
I have checked the bed dimensions in Cura (correct) and the nozzle touches 'home' perfectly in the bottom left corner of the bed.
Any ideas? Printer is a Tevo Tarantula in case that makes any difference, and works very well in every other regard.
AlexSimon
Subscriber
If you scroll back some pages, you can find my map work and some instructions.
It’s based on LIDAR data from the government.
For reference, it's page 10 - I just had a look.
I can't get some of the links to work.
The environment survey data page, just returns a blank page - I wonder if that is the work firewall stripping out some plug-in or functionality? I tried in Chrome & IE, but got nothing.
I did strip back the link & then searched for LIDAR, which have me this link (if it works!):
https://environment.data.gov.uk/searchresults;query=lidar;page=1;pagesize=20;orderby=Relevancy
but I wasn't sure where to go from there.
The accutrans link works fine: http://www.micromouse.ca/
The WikiTech instructions page didn't work, so again I stripped back the link until I got to the root & then found this page, which I think is the one required:
I love the youtube video for how to print onto wood! Great idea!
I had Astroprint running and connected for a while with the cable that you’ve got. It took me a little while to get it to connect to the printer and it was all to do with the baud rate. As soon as I typed in the correct value everything connected within a few seconds. I can’t remember what the rate actually was but might be worth checking that you have the correct rate set in Octoprint
Turned out it was the cable. I think it's a power only one. New cable and it will works fine with the Pi.
Your print of Snowdon looks good; what layer height were you printing at?
0.2mm. I tried a 0.1mm print the other day on a small object - looked great. But I figured 0.2 would be ok as it'd look like countours. Quite like the effect.
Re: the LIDAR data, I looked at that (along with the OS Terrian 50 data set), but it doesn't seem like Snowdon has been LIDARed - that surprised me, but seems to be the case (feel free to let me know if someone finds something different!).
I got my terrain data from https://terrain.party/ - seems to be astrim data. Will check out the other links.
Next landscape on the list is to make a rectangular one of the Bernia Ridge in Alicante (climbed it and proposed to the mrs a couple of years ago, so will make a good present).
