Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 25, 2018 07:13PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 53 |
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 25, 2018 11:48PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 126 |
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to-the-nth
Has anyone been successful in removing the adhesive backing and reattaching to a glass bed with 468MP?
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 26, 2018 03:54AM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 23 |
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 26, 2018 12:27PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 53 |
Did you use 468MP to reattach? Would love to who you purchased from so I can try to duplicate. One option is to start with a fresh piece of glass for a new bed and get a new PB from Jason to do an A vs B comparison. Maybe a recommendation from flex3drive for reattaching? I have large prints that explosively release and are almost 1mm shorter because of cooling. There is a lot of force involved.Quote
DaveOB
I moved my printbite a few days back.
Had to remove from an aluminium plate.
Got 1 corner to lift, then used a few thin bamboo skewers to gradually lift as I worked across, and prevented it from re-adhering on to the plate.
Adhesive was removed by wetting the adhesive with acetone, and while it was still very wet, gently scrape with a paint scraper. ( as soon as the acetone evaporates, the adhesive gets very tacky again )
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gadgetmind
I initially struggled with ABS on PB as my i3 Plus had an over-temp cut out at 110C. Once I reflashed it so I could hit 115C, it's been printing ABS very well. Upgrading to a Micro Swiss hot end also helped as it cured the occasional under extrusion that was causing cracks in prints.
I haven't seen any bubbles but my PB was attached to very clean glass - might your glass have had anything on the surface that would prevent the glue working?
I've been using PB for 6-8 months and level is critical, as is wiping it with acetone every so often. I find some filament seems to leave something behind and I need to clean the glass after every print, but with others it's fine for days. I also find that you *must* leave the bed to cool before removing the print or again it's not as effective afterwards.
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 26, 2018 12:33PM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 23 |
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 26, 2018 01:31PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 3,525 |
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! February 27, 2018 12:45AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 53 |
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gadgetmind
An hour? I've fitted two bits of PB and both times took only 10 mins or so to apply and then whatever the recommended heat cycle is.
...
I won't claim that I still don't see lifting on *very* odd occasions, but it's usually a sharp corner that hasn't gone down right initially and I now check these and abort the print if it goes wrong. It's usually then time for a clean and level test, but TBH I often go for weeks doing noting but press print and leave the printer to it.
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DjDemonD
I've never had printbite lift from the substrate, but I don't use glass, I bond it directly to aluminium tooling plate. If a part is a high risk for lifting then I use ABS juice over the printbite before printing and put mouse ears on any sharp corners. I've never had a problem getting parts off printbite. Once they cool they lift off, sometimes if I have used ABS juice it takes a little blade under the corners to get them to begin to peel away. However I do all my ABS printing now in well enclosed machines (45 deg C at least), and this helps immensely to reduce shrinkage in the part.
I have recently started using AndOrNot own brand surface, mainly because its cheap. ABS does stick to it quite well, at the same temps as I'd use for printbite, (PLA and PETG stick at much lower temps, sometimes low-warping risk parts with PLA need no bed heat at all) but I have cracked an AndOrNot sheet with an ABS part contracting, and because it was bonded so well (seems AndOrNot needs to be cooler for the part to detach).
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DaveOB
I moved my printbite a few days back.
Had to remove from an aluminium plate.
Re: New print surface material? March 01, 2018 08:24AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 3,525 |
Re: New print surface material? March 06, 2018 12:28AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 53 |
Your 115C with Aluminum Plate will probably be similar to my 120C glass. Thanks for the sanity check. Good reference numbers. Do you force cool the plate with a fan after the print? My 330x330 was taking over 1/2 hour to cool.Quote
DjDemonD
I use 250 deg C nozzle and 115 deg C bed for abs. 225-240 nozzle and 80 deg C bed for petg and 215 deg C nozzle and 70 deg C bed for pla on PB old white one.
Re: New print surface material? April 14, 2018 08:49AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 35 |
Re: New print surface material? May 11, 2018 03:40AM |
Registered: 5 years ago Posts: 42 |
Re: Printbite - Love it! Hate it! May 19, 2018 04:31AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 15 |
Quote
to-the-nth
Has anyone been successful in removing the adhesive backing and reattaching to a glass bed with 468MP?
Re: New print surface material? July 17, 2018 04:52AM |
Registered: 5 years ago Posts: 50 |
Re: New print surface material? July 17, 2018 11:57PM |
Registered: 5 years ago Posts: 50 |
Re: New print surface material? November 25, 2018 06:28AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 7 |
Re: New print surface material? November 25, 2018 06:58AM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 23 |
Re: New print surface material? November 25, 2018 08:23AM |
Registered: 5 years ago Posts: 50 |
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gadgetmind
PrintBite is easy to fit to glass and bubbles aren't really an issue if you take care.
I print PLA, PETG, ABS and TPU straight onto it and all it takes to clean it is window cleaner or a wipe with acetone.
Level is important, but that's always the case.
Re: New print surface material? January 13, 2020 04:34PM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 168 |
Re: New print surface material? January 14, 2020 05:04AM |
Admin Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 3,096 |
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hobbymods
I've been using the original Printbite for about 3 years, straight onto cast ally tool plate. Results have always been good with PLA/PETG, but hit and miss with ABS.
It seems this might be due to the fact that my IR probe doesn't seem to be reading it well. Z homing is consistent, but the bed leveling mesh looks awful and the bed is definitely that "lumpy".
Has anyone used the new matt black Printbite with (David Crockers) IR probe?
I love having a durable, permanent and self releasing surface, and unless there's some other permanent surface out there that is better with the IR probe, I'm more likely to change probes than surfaces.
While it's expensive, I'd also consider the Filaprint surface if it's self adhesive, IR compatible and long term durable. I don't want to jerk around with tape/spray/glue ever again!
Re: New print surface material? May 13, 2020 08:51AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 35 |
Re: New print surface material? May 14, 2020 04:40AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 231 |
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dtwrv6
over 5 years on my first sheet of Printbite160C bedtemps haven't hurt it one bit.
I'm pretty hard on it - I've used acetone, mek, alcohol, vinegar and scrape it with a razor blade on occasion to clean it. It just keeps working.
Re: New print surface material? May 14, 2020 05:16AM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 23 |
Re: New print surface material? May 14, 2020 06:10PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 35 |
Re: New print surface material? May 31, 2020 04:29AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 168 |
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Ohmarinus
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hobbymods
I've been using the original Printbite for about 3 years, straight onto cast ally tool plate. Results have always been good with PLA/PETG, but hit and miss with ABS.
It seems this might be due to the fact that my IR probe doesn't seem to be reading it well. Z homing is consistent, but the bed leveling mesh looks awful and the bed is definitely that "lumpy".
Has anyone used the new matt black Printbite with (David Crockers) IR probe?
I love having a durable, permanent and self releasing surface, and unless there's some other permanent surface out there that is better with the IR probe, I'm more likely to change probes than surfaces.
While it's expensive, I'd also consider the Filaprint surface if it's self adhesive, IR compatible and long term durable. I don't want to jerk around with tape/spray/glue ever again!
Cast alloy tool plate? As in: not aluminium?
Then I would advice you to look at inductive proximity sensing. I even use it on aluminium but the sensing distance is really short. These sensors have worked the best out of every type of sensor I've ever used. These sensors don't look at the surface, but at the material underneath, and your tooling plate should be exactly flat. So the sensor should make for a perfectly flat mesh.
Dive into it, it's really good. Also, another option would be to use piezo sensing, but it is a lot more work to install and means you have to rebuild either your extruder or your heated bed when using underbed sensors.
An inductive sensor can easily be attached. You could print a simple holder and even glue the holder onto your X-carriage with some epoxy for example. The sensors have thread which allows for fine tuning and the initial tuning process is quite simple. Just keep in mind you have to set offsets in the config for the sensor location in relation to the nozzle.
Re: New print surface material? June 03, 2020 09:24AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 35 |