Can't stop warping on certain prints May 02, 2015 09:02AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 02, 2015 09:41AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 02, 2015 10:02AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 02, 2015 10:14AM |
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Radian
OK, thanks David, I'll give it a try - but I can't help thinking that the bottom of the printed part is too hot compared to the top - hence a greater thermal expansion factor. I thought the usual setting for a higher bed temperature for the first layer was so the freshly deposited plastic didn't cool too far and contract/come unstuck before the print got going. That was just my assumption at any rate.
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 02, 2015 10:37AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 03, 2015 11:30AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 04, 2015 02:35PM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 07, 2015 09:43AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 07, 2015 04:12PM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 07, 2015 05:43PM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 07, 2015 07:22PM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 09, 2015 07:59AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
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dc42
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Radian
OK, thanks David, I'll give it a try - but I can't help thinking that the bottom of the printed part is too hot compared to the top - hence a greater thermal expansion factor. I thought the usual setting for a higher bed temperature for the first layer was so the freshly deposited plastic didn't cool too far and contract/come unstuck before the print got going. That was just my assumption at any rate.
There may be some truth in that, but the counter argument is that reducing the bed temperature reduces the adhesion between the print and the glass.
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 09, 2015 04:05PM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 09, 2015 06:45PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
I can confirm this - and before needing a full re-coat just a wipe with a damp cloth works for print after print. Any sticky left on the part wipes off soooo easily (or you can just lick it offQuote
dmould
I've read elsewhere that a coat of sugar water makes a great bed preparation - and what's more does not adhere to the print when the print is removed so does not need a re-coat after every print. I will try it out somewhen.
Dave
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 10, 2015 11:35AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 10, 2015 11:43AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 10, 2015 02:53PM |
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Radian
..Taking a heat gun to one side of a room-temperature 80mm square by 3mm thick printed plate, contrary to my intuition, the hot side becomes concave such that the edges would be forced down if on a heated surface. I really don't understand the physics governing this..
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 10, 2015 05:37PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
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dc42
Have you tried reducing the amount of cooling air flowing over the nozzle from the fan duct? The later Ormerod hot ends do not direct any of the air from the hot end fan over the nozzle.
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ormerod168
... until shrink-less filament is invented I see no other cure than to make sure the print sticks to the bed and ad a lot of cooling to the printed part as well as directly to the newly laid down filament
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 10, 2015 05:51PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 14,685 |
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Radian
I guess the problem is that while it would be possible to rapid-cool the extruded filament, it might adversely affect the fusion of the plastic?
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 07:54AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
Not quite true. While it may not be moving, it may well have internal stresses that are pulling on the layers and making the part weaker. I suppose ideally all printed parts should be put into a very well regulated oven and left at the glass transition temperature until heated all the way through to relieve any internal stress, and then the oven should cool down very slowly so it cools down without creating any temperature differentials between the inside and outside of the part..Quote
Radian
Logically speaking, any printed object that's in thermal equilibrium with itself and its surroundings is obviously stable - i.e a part I pick up that was printed a day ago isn't actively curling up at the edges!
The only way that the layers are going to fuse together is if the extruded plastic is molten when it touches the previous layer. You then have a thin thread of very hot plastic that is fused with much cooler plastic, and so when that top thread cools it is going to try to pull up the ends of the cooler layer. My thinking is that if it cools down slowly the thermal shrinking will take place while the plastic is still pliable enough to stretch, so the shrinking is compensated for by the stretching. This is why cooling air increases warping - but decreases curl-up on overhangs by stopping the lower layers becoming molten, and also reduces sag on bridges. This is why a controllable nozzle fan is useful - you need to cool the layer slowly in most cases, but there are times when it needs to be cooled faster. The hotter the lower layer, the less the temperature difference and hence less differential shrinkage (warping), which is why printing in a hot cabinet reduces warping. Again though, large parts should be allowed to cool down inside the enclosure so they cool slowly, otherwise there will be created a large temperature difference between the inside and outside of the print which could potentially cause internal delamination that is not easily detectable.Quote
Radian
So if the extruded filament is rapidly brought down to ambient temperature as printing progresses then the emerging object should remain stable. I guess the problem is that while it would be possible to rapid-cool the extruded filament, it might adversely affect the fusion of the plastic?
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 08:18AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 08:55AM |
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Radian
That all seems to make perfect sense Dave. I hadn't been considering the curl-up that happens on overhangs. But going back to warping on the base, while the first few layers start off well-stuck, I find it often only begins to lift (at any sharp corners) when the nozzle is several mm further up. This made me think that by then the body of the part had cooled to a lower temperature than the base. Are you suggesting that the contraction is always "top down"?
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 09:09AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 09:18AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 09:27AM |
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Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 10:27AM |
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Yes, that's correct - IOW they would create vertical lines.Quote
Radian
So in this case which direction would corrugations go to relieve the stress? From what you say I'm guessing vertical (90deg from the bed plane)
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Radian
I wish OpenSCAD had a simple "rounding" or "Fillet" parameter for cube edges. That would help with my cubist tendencies!
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 01:40PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 1,230 |
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shadow651
I think lifting at corners at the base is from a somewhat different mechanic. I think it's the result of shrinkage in the 'in line' direction of perimeters
As each of the perimeters shrink, there's some tension that develops. On shallow corners or rounded corners this never accumulates to enough force to overcome the adhesion to the bed, in fact rounded corners will cancel out some of the forces in question. But when you get into sharper corners (<= 90 Degrees) both sides of each corner are pulling away from the corner. The sharper the angle, the higher the resulting combined force acting on the corner.....
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 02:14PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 1,230 |
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Radian
Hi Erik, that's a fabulous looking thing - what is it?
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.. perhaps a cylindrical co-axial duct surrounding the nozzle blowing thermoelectrically chilled air under closed-loop temperature control to cancel the thermal input from the hot-end ?
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 02:40PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 177 |
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ormerod168
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shadow651
I think lifting at corners at the base is from a somewhat different mechanic. I think it's the result of shrinkage in the 'in line' direction of perimeters
As each of the perimeters shrink, there's some tension that develops. On shallow corners or rounded corners this never accumulates to enough force to overcome the adhesion to the bed, in fact rounded corners will cancel out some of the forces in question. But when you get into sharper corners (<= 90 Degrees) both sides of each corner are pulling away from the corner. The sharper the angle, the higher the resulting combined force acting on the corner.....
I agree with the cure (round corners print better) but I'm not convinced about the cause - in line forces even out in round corners bit - yes if we e.g. see the perimeters as free floating rubber bands on top of each other around a cardboard box, surely adding more and more rubber band up the sides will ad greater and greater pulling force to the walls and lift the corners as much as the sides will compress (as long as the stay flat, not collapse)
If the corners of same cardboard box was rounded a bit the sides would already be in the direction of cylinder mode (did not sound right, hope you get my drift), and fail with less force, the lift should be worse
I cannot picture how the force of perimeters fused together would be canceled out in the corners, I would think its more about greater heat accumulation in sharp corners than rounded, would be interesting to see a time shift thermo graph picture of a print
Erik
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ormerod168
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Radian
Hi Erik, that's a fabulous looking thing - what is it?
Hedgehog Forte from thingiverse, great overhang/cooling/retraction test piece, notice how close the overhangs is to the heatbed, you got to start the cooling as soon as the print get a grip, but amazingly it prints very well, only have tried with PLA
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.. perhaps a cylindrical co-axial duct surrounding the nozzle blowing thermoelectrically chilled air under closed-loop temperature control to cancel the thermal input from the hot-end ?
Yes I have been thinking about that but there is too little space available under the original ormerod hotend, even a higher pressure (aquarium pump) one so I'm thinking about changing that part and mount something like this:
Erik
Re: Can't stop warping on certain prints May 11, 2015 04:30PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 300 |
Thanks for sharing Dave. It's a new way of modelling for me but I'm getting to like it the more I use it.Quote
dmould
The big advantage with Openscad is that if it hasn't got a particular function, you can simply create one by writing a module. I have two "rounded cube" and a "fillet" module that I just paste into a new design. They are all pretty simple.