I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 14, 2018 08:30PM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 10 |
Re: I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 15, 2018 02:38AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 5,232 |
If you still want to do this, don't forget to take a video and post itQuote
1) smash the printer on the ground, again and again, till it becomes dust. Seriously.
Re: I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 15, 2018 04:28AM |
Admin Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 7,007 |
Re: I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 15, 2018 01:30PM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 10 |
Quote
o_lampe
You changed the whole hotend and you might have a different heater now.
I think, you only have to run a PID tuning for the hotend and the temp-error will be gone.
Because of the new nozzle, you might also have to adjust z-height ( sensor height ) again.
If you still want to do this, don't forget to take a video and post itQuote
1) smash the printer on the ground, again and again, till it becomes dust. Seriously.
You might earn enough money with it to buy a new printer
Re: I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 16, 2018 02:27AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 5,232 |
Re: I can't find a solution, so I ask for a council September 16, 2018 01:58PM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 10 |
Quote
o_lampe
It depends on your hardware/firmware. But generally you connect your printer to a host program ( pronterface, repetier host etc. ) and send the PID command while the hotend is cold.
E.g. Marlin will process the PID tuning and return the new values. Then you have to store these new values in Eeprom. The gcode-wiki I linked you, has a few more commands regarding PID ( see M130 ff).