I have spent parts of the last 2 days trying to finish calibrating a hardened stainless steel .60mm nozzle with Sunlu PLA+ 2.0 filament.

I have been trying to print a test cube and I couldn’t get the first layer to stick period. I washed plates, I swapped plates, I removed the nozzle and reinstalled it.

I swapped different filament brands, and they all printed flawlessly. Try that Sunlu white PLA and instant failure again. I was about ready to admit defeat and dry my first spool of PLA ever because I could think of nothing else to do.

But I took one last look at my settings for this filament. And I finally noticed my flow ratio was set at .096 rather than .96. I didn’t even know the slicer would allow a number that small.

Once again the error was found to be located between the chair and the screen…

  • TDCN@feddit.dk
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    1 day ago

    Thanks for sharing. It feels good to know you are not alone. I had a similar experience once where after lots of debugging I realized the “PLA” I was using was in fact PETG and I was extruding way too cold.

    • Bluewing@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 hours ago

      Ha! Years ago, I once spent nearly 2 whole days trying to unknowingly splice PLA and PETG together. All because I was an idiot and didn’t read the spool labels. I just assumed, with the obvious results and damage to my ego…

  • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I once spent quite a bit of time because I fat fingered a huge retraction amount and failed to spot it for days. You wouldn’t think the slicer would have allowed a 50mm retraction distance either. It was a direct drive extruder and I was unloading my filament when I thought my extruder was stopping up randomly.

    • Bluewing@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 hours ago

      Isn’t amazing what slicers can do? There ain’t no guard rails where we’re going!