Filament Calibration
Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2016 10:43 am
So, I recently re-calibrated my printer, and I had to change the arm lengths to get use of the whole bed. I used an online calculator to calibrate it, and I was unable to get below 0.09 mm standard deviation prior to changing the arm length. This is why I'm hesitant to change the length back.
I haven't measured yet, but I believe this will slightly decreases the size of the parts. It got me thinking...
If my parts are printing smaller than I expect, does that mean my extruder is pushing too much filament for the distance the hot end is moving? I'm currently printing a calibration tower, and I noticed that the stringing that I fixed prior to calibration is back. This makes me think the back pressure has increased due to the smaller print size.
I don't want to change the arm length due to the reasons discussed above. Would it make sense to adjust my extruder's steps per mm by the percentage difference in the x/y directions?
Thanks
I haven't measured yet, but I believe this will slightly decreases the size of the parts. It got me thinking...
If my parts are printing smaller than I expect, does that mean my extruder is pushing too much filament for the distance the hot end is moving? I'm currently printing a calibration tower, and I noticed that the stringing that I fixed prior to calibration is back. This makes me think the back pressure has increased due to the smaller print size.
I don't want to change the arm length due to the reasons discussed above. Would it make sense to adjust my extruder's steps per mm by the percentage difference in the x/y directions?
Thanks