Oh For Heaven's Sake!
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2015 4:57 pm
About 2 hours into a 7 hour print the printer suddenly stopped and I got the message:
SENT: M105
WARNING: Firmware unresponsive. Attempting to force continue...
Which seems to be some sort of reference to an attempt to check the nozzle temperature?
Since I'd like to try to save the print if I can....I paused it immediately, dropped the bed, shaved off the glob of goo that it had dumped in that one spot when it stopped for a minute.
Checked the nozzle temperature and toasted my finger.
So, I thought maybe the connection was bad - it was printing over USB. Tightened up all of the connections, sent a couple of bed movement commands. They were eventually performed, but the movements were sluggish and it took a couple of minutes each time for them to be executed.
Tried an extrusion - Again, it did eventually extrude, but it took a long time to get around to it. The communications were filled with the "M105/Firmware unresponsive" comment.
Tried turning off the nozzle heater, let it cool (thinking maybe something had overheated and the thermistor just needed to reset). Heated it back up and tried to resume the print.
No good. Still getting the M105 error message.
Okay, thought it might be a bad thermistor. Cooled it off again and actually swapped out the hotend while the print was paused.
Sent a Fan-Off command that took 10 minutes to execute.
Sent a Fan-On command that took half an hour.
So I'm guessing now that the problem is not the thermistor in the original nozzle. I'm suspecting that I should have printed this damned thing from the SD card instead of trying to send such a large file over USB.
Is there any way to save this print?
It's currently paused while printing over USB. The machine is still running, the bed is heated to 40° to keep it from shrinking too much while I await the answer.
Can I stop the print and restart it from the place where it paused? Is that doable?
SENT: M105
WARNING: Firmware unresponsive. Attempting to force continue...
Which seems to be some sort of reference to an attempt to check the nozzle temperature?
Since I'd like to try to save the print if I can....I paused it immediately, dropped the bed, shaved off the glob of goo that it had dumped in that one spot when it stopped for a minute.
Checked the nozzle temperature and toasted my finger.
So, I thought maybe the connection was bad - it was printing over USB. Tightened up all of the connections, sent a couple of bed movement commands. They were eventually performed, but the movements were sluggish and it took a couple of minutes each time for them to be executed.
Tried an extrusion - Again, it did eventually extrude, but it took a long time to get around to it. The communications were filled with the "M105/Firmware unresponsive" comment.
Tried turning off the nozzle heater, let it cool (thinking maybe something had overheated and the thermistor just needed to reset). Heated it back up and tried to resume the print.
No good. Still getting the M105 error message.
Okay, thought it might be a bad thermistor. Cooled it off again and actually swapped out the hotend while the print was paused.
Sent a Fan-Off command that took 10 minutes to execute.
Sent a Fan-On command that took half an hour.
So I'm guessing now that the problem is not the thermistor in the original nozzle. I'm suspecting that I should have printed this damned thing from the SD card instead of trying to send such a large file over USB.
Is there any way to save this print?
It's currently paused while printing over USB. The machine is still running, the bed is heated to 40° to keep it from shrinking too much while I await the answer.
Can I stop the print and restart it from the place where it paused? Is that doable?