$800/year is a lot to save maybe $1000 worth of games. At least that’s what an LLC costs where I live.
$800/year is a lot to save maybe $1000 worth of games. At least that’s what an LLC costs where I live.
Depends where you live. I live in a desert so humidity isn’t an issue, but dust is. I keep most of my filament in bags just to protect from dust. The only one I actually vacuum seal is tpu. Pla, pla+, and petg all do fine without. If I store it for more than a year though, I run it through the dryer first. Or at least have the dryer running while I print from it.
You do if you buy a German car. Even US spec ones have rear fogs.
Mine is in my bedroom. Moderate rgb, corsair fans. Light and sound don’t bother me though. It’s quieter than my 3d printer which is also in my room, but I don’t run it at night.
I would have it in another room if I could though. We just don’t have the space right now.
Make sure you calibrate your e-steps after swapping hotends. I did the same thing on my ender 3 putting on a volcano hotend, and started getting overextrusion. After adjusting the e-steps it was back to normal.
Check for a partial clog. 80% of the time i get that consistency with petg, its because the nozzle is partially clogged. The other 20% is the ptfe tubing is shot. Usually it partially melts and causes underextrusion.
Wet filament could be an issue too, but this is pretty extreme for wet filament.
US dollars. I’m in California, which is probably one of the most expensive states to get an LLC but still. Even at $100/year I’m probably not getting my money’s worth. Digital games don’t hold their value unfortunately.