Geeetech i3 Prusa Pro B teething problems
Posted: Sat Jan 20, 2018 4:01 am
Hi,
For educational purposes, and some learning on the job, I went fot a Geeetech Prusa i3 Pro B 3d printer. As a model kit enthousiast, building wouldn't be the problem. The elcetronics, not my cop of tea to say....
Building took some time, parts list didn't meet up with the building instructions. Other parts as listed, some poor quality nuts and bolts. But with the YouTube support i got it right more or less.
First print..... well sort of.... Electronics didn't work as promised. So had to find out by trial and error how connections had te be made, and with this forum found some solutions. Finally, I got right, the extruder did find it's homing position. Some fine tunig on the printerbed to get calibrated, even that was a small succes.
So, let the printing begin. First few prints, small flat objects, to get to know the printer, temparatures, gcode, printing speed, some results were there.
And now, things come to a halt of a misfunction in the extruding erea.
Symptoms are as following:
After 25 minutes of running, the extruder motor starts to make the clunky sound when it's trying to push the filament through the nozzle.Before printing, I set the temperature of filament at 220, but the firmware sets it back to 215 after 10 minutes orso. No idea why...
Taking out the filament after the clunky sound shows a thickening of the filament of a about 15 mm, and of course chunks taken out of the filament where the gear crushed the plastic.
Of course, when the clunky sound starts, the printing stops and the nozzle seems to be jammed. Usinf the ejector pin lets out the left filament easy, so what's the problem?
Another problem, the filament coming out of the the extruder seems seems to pull threads during printing, with several types of filament. Resulting in getting a print pulled of the printerbed and curled around the nozzle. Also not a result to be proud of....
So, any one recognizing this?
And yes, I've done some printing experience with a Vertex K series printer (not build by myself, but that one prints...) and some Ultimaker machines, and they also seem to print (with their minor problems to be honest).
thanks for your effort in this, I will drop a line with my findings later on.
Regards, Peter
For educational purposes, and some learning on the job, I went fot a Geeetech Prusa i3 Pro B 3d printer. As a model kit enthousiast, building wouldn't be the problem. The elcetronics, not my cop of tea to say....
Building took some time, parts list didn't meet up with the building instructions. Other parts as listed, some poor quality nuts and bolts. But with the YouTube support i got it right more or less.
First print..... well sort of.... Electronics didn't work as promised. So had to find out by trial and error how connections had te be made, and with this forum found some solutions. Finally, I got right, the extruder did find it's homing position. Some fine tunig on the printerbed to get calibrated, even that was a small succes.
So, let the printing begin. First few prints, small flat objects, to get to know the printer, temparatures, gcode, printing speed, some results were there.
And now, things come to a halt of a misfunction in the extruding erea.
Symptoms are as following:
After 25 minutes of running, the extruder motor starts to make the clunky sound when it's trying to push the filament through the nozzle.Before printing, I set the temperature of filament at 220, but the firmware sets it back to 215 after 10 minutes orso. No idea why...
Taking out the filament after the clunky sound shows a thickening of the filament of a about 15 mm, and of course chunks taken out of the filament where the gear crushed the plastic.
Of course, when the clunky sound starts, the printing stops and the nozzle seems to be jammed. Usinf the ejector pin lets out the left filament easy, so what's the problem?
Another problem, the filament coming out of the the extruder seems seems to pull threads during printing, with several types of filament. Resulting in getting a print pulled of the printerbed and curled around the nozzle. Also not a result to be proud of....
So, any one recognizing this?
And yes, I've done some printing experience with a Vertex K series printer (not build by myself, but that one prints...) and some Ultimaker machines, and they also seem to print (with their minor problems to be honest).
thanks for your effort in this, I will drop a line with my findings later on.
Regards, Peter