jtrue wrote:thank you for your time in the reply. I would love to be wrong here. Here's the flow so far.
I went thru the bed heightening procedure and it all made sense to me. The sample sheet of paper provided yielded a just noticeable sign of resistance after adjusting the height from each corner. After this came the part where you need to compensate for the lowest corner (which i did have one lower). Another round of sheet adjustment and then came the allen wrench screw height adjustment. I went through this process also but must admit the first time i wasn't as picky about the allen wrench part as the screws were so tight i was afraid i might break something. The second time i adjusted though i didn't get shy and the plat was leveled. Before leveling i had one print come off mid-make but no other slippages. After the second adjustment the burners took out the yellow film on top of the plate (this is what i described as "burning" sorry about being vague there.
I have built my CNC router from the inventables kit and it involved a lot of work. I want to say this in hopes you will see im not quick to give up or be shy with new tech. Also, this 3d printer was so much easier and the parts are so much better than my CNC.
I am really wishing i was just getting some results to put me back in the fan column. Also, now that the yellow film is torn i don't know what to do. I've found some youtube videos that explain tape is used on non-heated beds, the 3d printer came with a roll of tape but i have a heated bed and this film? Not sure what it does. It told me in the directions not to remove it. Maybe i've missed a manual somewhere? Im not going to use it until i can find what the tape is all about and how i get some new yellow film for the heat plate.
I've tried both PLA and ABS. I know different filaments get different heat settings.
I've attach the image of the "burned" part of the heat plate. Better word is "melted". I would be most open to anyone educating me about my results or how i can better understand this technology or use it more effectively. Right now, I'm not sure if buyers can expect to hit print and rely on an object to come out barring the occasional "paper jam" that consumer products will have.
IMG_7358.JPG
That's definitely too close to the bed, and you cut & tore the tape with the print head. Remove the glass bed, peel the rest of the tape off, wash the bed very, very well with hot water and dish soap (and a scrubbie), until it's the cleanest thing in your household, then clean it further. Dry it front and back with paper towels. Tolerate NO specks, adhesive, or dirt -- use a razor blade if you must.
Place the clean bed back on your printer (don't clip it in), heat it to 50C, REMOVE IT FROM THE PRINTER, then set it down on a raised surface (I use the railing on my deck, or spanning a small trashcan), and soak the bejesus out of it with Aquanet "Extreme Hold" hairspray. It comes in a white & purple can at the dollar store. You want the hot bed to evaporate the hairspray quickly, and you do NOT want hairspray near your printer.
Once the bed is soaked and steaming, carefully place it back into the printer so the heated plate can drive the rest of the hairspray off. Once it's dry, swivel-clip it back in, start a print, and force the Z knob counterclockwise a few clunks, right before the extrusion starts. This will drop the print bed farther from the nozzle and prevent dragging. Get down at eye level with the printer, and clunk the knob back and forth until the height of the thread is about equal to its width -- this is a wholy unscientific method of getting prints running, but it will narrow down the machine working or not.
Use your PLA at 205/60C, and print something simple like my NEMA17-608ZZ adapter:
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:21499
Post pictures.