Printed with Duramic PLA+ white. Printed way too fast for such a small model. Printed at 0.08mm layer height using the standard 0.4mm nozzle. Took about 34.5 min for print.
I thought the wings were going to be fused, because I had it too hot (240C) because I’d been printing larger things fast all day. But after carefully cutting away the brim, and then using a steel ruler to press on the wings, then magic! It moved!
Honestly this is hella impressive. I did all the wrong things (too fast, too hot), and it still worked!
Printed from the AMS with the default settings provided through the rfid chip. Only changed infill to 25% in bambustudio. Ofcourse used the engineer plate (other side of the pla surface)
Not sure if that is the right question. The gcode that controls the printer instructs which ams “port” to use and that code gets generated by the slicer. Ready to go colored 3d files by my knowledge are not usable because they are just the 3D objects. You need to do the coloring in the slicer software to generate the right code for the right printer.
Starting to figure out this printer and 3d printing. These are printed with the 0.2 nozzle with .1mm layer height. Eryone mat pla pretty much all stock settings, other than the supports that I had to play with quite a bit to get to work. About 2 hours each to print on the Carbon x-1.
Always looking to improve and am open to suggestions.
Printer X1C
Filament Polymaker Black ASA - Polymaker Bronze (it’s really copper)
Model link CarnyRex Creations
Print settings .2 on the stocks and .14 on the silk parts.
Print Time - all parts about a day and a half. about two to three hrs of assembly.
**Printer X1C
**Filament Polymaker Bronze, Jayo black silk, and Polymaker Matte OD Green Model link CarnyRex Creations
**Print settings Silks at .14 and Matte at .2 Print time 2 full days and half day assembly
I have more failed prints with the P1P than any other printer I’ve used. For anything complex or small, or sometimes even to large, it just goes too fast by default and screws itself up. I love getting a spaghetti monster 6 hours into a print because the nozzle was moving at mach 10 and raked across some infill that was curling up and knocked the model loose.
This is Clockspring 3D’s “624 Radical Flask”, printed on the Bambu X1-Carbon. The filaments are Amolen (red-orange), Locyfens (purple/black), and unbranded gold and black - all PLA. Generic PLA profile. This was a 43-hour print, but it took over three days because the printer paused overnight twice - the first was that the purple spool got stuck somehow, easily freed, the second was that the printer detected that the “poop chute” was full. Both times I corrected the problem and resumed the print.
Overall, a gorgeous print. Small bits of stringing on the outside, more on the inside (the lid screws on) due to overhangs, but it didn’t seem to create a problem.