Working with rafts & getting a model started correctly?
Posted: Wed Sep 23, 2015 11:26 pm
Hi Guys,
Working with Simplify3D, and have printed about 8-10 models so far, so still very much a noob. I've been playing with the printing profiles and the temperatures just to experiment, and have had decent luck, but still end up with some small issues.
Issue one is I always have to use a raft to get the models to stick, and that's on top of already having put down the tape that came with the unit and using stick glue on the deck on top of that. That issue causes the 'unkempt' starting point for my models. Usually, I'll start the fan at 30 percent for the first layer or two, so it get's a good sticky foundation, and move it up to 60 percent from there for the rest of the print. The 'unkempt' part remains stuck to the model, even when I've done rafts that are as little in thickness as 4% and a single layer. The filaments typically break off, and I'm left with a women mess on one side of my model. The rest of the model seems to print fairly nicely. Any tips? Here's an image of what I'm dealing with.
Working with Simplify3D, and have printed about 8-10 models so far, so still very much a noob. I've been playing with the printing profiles and the temperatures just to experiment, and have had decent luck, but still end up with some small issues.
Issue one is I always have to use a raft to get the models to stick, and that's on top of already having put down the tape that came with the unit and using stick glue on the deck on top of that. That issue causes the 'unkempt' starting point for my models. Usually, I'll start the fan at 30 percent for the first layer or two, so it get's a good sticky foundation, and move it up to 60 percent from there for the rest of the print. The 'unkempt' part remains stuck to the model, even when I've done rafts that are as little in thickness as 4% and a single layer. The filaments typically break off, and I'm left with a women mess on one side of my model. The rest of the model seems to print fairly nicely. Any tips? Here's an image of what I'm dealing with.