Obviously a person can spend a lot of time dialing in bridging settings to get the right combination of bridging speed, flow, and whether or not thick bridges are enabled.
When selecting on-the-fly speed settings like Silent, Standard, Sport, and Ludicrous, does it affect bridging speeds accordingly? Or do the slicer bridging speed settings override the on-the-fly speed settings?
If bridging speeds are affected, is the flow adjusted automatically to compensate? (We can’t change the physics of the heated filament)
To the more general question, which of the speed settings in the slicer are affected by the on-the-fly speed changes? All of them? Only the normal filament extrusion speed? Travel speed? Retraction speed? Overhang speeds? Bridging speed?
Why it matters: When printing detailed delicate models like the Eiffel Tower with its many thin girders, it is imperative to dial in bridging speed. But it is also desirable to dial back the jerkiness of the printer head movement so that the small stacked dots of filament are placed on the girders more precisely. In other words, a print head whipping along at breakneck speeds has a tendency to knock aside a wispy thin girder of filament before it can be attached at the top of its intersection with the main girder. So I’m thinking of slowing the print down with Silent mode, if that slows down the jerky travel etc., but if it affects my finely-tuned bridging settings, forget it! I am not interested in trying to manually fine-tune every speed setting in the slicer’s advanced settings.