Tweaking for perfect jerk/accel/pressure advance blob removal.
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If it can help I run my titan mounted with 1.8°degree motor on 24v at 9000 in acceleration and 2000 in jerk. I put this value because there are the max value trying on my machine, so no relation…? and it works fine !
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@cubexupgrade:
If it can help I run my titan mounted with 1.8°degree motor on 24v at 9000 in acceleration and 2000 in jerk. I put this value because there are the max value trying on my machine, so no relation…? and it works fine !
More or less this makes the motor behave as if acceleration is turned off. It should snap very quickly on retracts. I also run 24v, can't see running a printer off 12v if 24v is an option. Setting the max speed of course is required or it'll chew the gears on the extruder really quickly. Keep in mind having the jerk setting that high might reduce the life of the extruder a bit. Some random thoughts, chillin out on a Friday night with an IPA.
Jeff
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Might try mine a bit faster then.
Switched it to 3000 acceleration and 1500 (mm/min) jerk. Sounds click-ier but doesn't seem to alter the print quality that I can see. There must in theory be a point at which faster retraction does nothing to improve normal speed printing, but I am sure at extreme speeds it will help a lot.
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You're right, the delrin gear will dead quickly, but e3d sell spare part and it's really fun when your printer doesn't stop moving (i can't see a pause for retract) !
If you're chilling time is not full you can watch a test done for a filament manufacturer : https://youtu.be/ZbAPCmVaDfA -
Just a couple of observations.
Comparing your extruder settings with mine (I also have E3D Titans - 3 of them in fact, feeding a diamond hot end) I'd say that maybe they are a bit low which would likely lead to slow retraction and might be part of the problem. You are using 300mm /min which is only 5mm /sec whereas I'm using 2400 mm/min (40mm/sec). Also, my accel is set to 1000 compare to your 250. So it might be worth upping you extruders speeds and accels to make retraction a bit snappier.
I also find that, contrary to what a lot of people say, I get better results with faster speeds - especially non print moves. You do need a very rigid machine though and with your bed moving in Y, you might be a bit restricted in how fast you can go. It might be worth upping speeds a bit, especially non-print moves just to see if it helps.
Also, have you tuned the retraction amount? I use the minimum retraction that I can print a couple of objects about 100mm apart without any stringing between them.
Oh, and temperature too - again I print a tower varying the temperature every 10mm or so, then pick the lowest temperature that still gives a good finish. This is almost invariably at the bottom end (or with T glass even lower) than is recommended but it works for me.
Just some ideas…..
HTHIt's not completely a retraction issue, a blob of similar size is created with both travel moves and retraction. As far as retraction goes though, my slicer is set to retract 1.8mm @ 55m/s in the slicer. I feel like I need to make the all the settings that bit snappier and the blobs will disappear without the need for pressure advance. As for temperature, It's set to maximize layer adhesion in my set up, which is usually 195-205c for PLA. This creates a bit of stringing, but I'd rather have the stringing and good layer adhesion. I've not tried temp calibration to see if blobbing is removed, but the blobbing appears on just about any material @ 300 microns. I print in PET, PLA and ABS. I find E3D's lack of support when it comes to settings on the Titan annoying. They've wrote a lot about settings for their hotends.
If you get small blobs on the print just before travel moves, this means you need more retraction. But I agree with deckingman, you also need to increase your extruder acceleration and maximum speeds a lot.
If you use a hot end that is sensitive to over-retraction such as the all metal E3D, then as you increase pressure advance you should reduce retraction.
I've found that pressure advance is not completely satisfactory as it creates areas of under and over extrusion. This is only very slight but enough to see with your own eyes on black PLA. In comparison, without pressure advance I get perfect layer adhesion with no noticeable undulations except for on travel moves and retractions with the blob. I will try with some of the settings posted here though and possibly post some pictures of my calibration cubes.
What I find interesting is that similar settings on my direct drive non geared extruder did not have these blobs on either retraction or travel moves, what changed when I switched to 3:1 gearing?
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….......................What I find interesting is that similar settings on my direct drive non geared extruder did not have these blobs on either retraction or travel moves, what changed when I switched to 3:1 gearing?
Well you kind of answered your own question - the 3:1 gearing is what changed.
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So another update,
I upped the extruder to -
Max speed 3600
Accel. 1000
Jerk 1200Some difference to the blobs, but only marginally. I still don't get how the 3:1 gearing can create such a difference, even when I up the settings. Do other people get such blobs? They start about 1.5mm away from a retraction point, and protrude roughly 0.1mm to make a highly visible blob.
The left is the old settings with pressure advance (M572 D0 S0.1), the middle is just the old settings and the right is the new settings. You can see that pressure advance has definitely stopped the blobs, but added under extrusion to a new line. The blobs on new and old settings look exactly the same to my eye, but the camera actually highlighted that they have a difference in size. -
I upped the XY acceleration and jerk too, along with the new extruder settings to see if this had an affect. It certainly made the printer snappier, but it had little affect on retraction blobbing.
XY accel - 5000 (upped from 3000)
XY Jerk - 1000, 1000 (upped from 600, 400)
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Ah now those pictures paint a different story altogether. Assuming the side is facing upwards, then it doesn't happen every layer. I'd guess form the pictures every 4th or 5th layers. To me, that would indicate something wrong mechanically.
Edit. Which no amount of tweaking of accelerations, jerk or speed is going to cure. I'd look for something loose or sticking somewhere that might have happened when you changed the extruder. -
It is happening every 3 layers, as it retracts on a different corner each time. This is 'optimize start points' feature in S3D. I can confirm that every blob is a retraction point in the slicer simulation. The edge without retractions is completely smooth. The reason its set this way is so that every blob can be seen, rather then having a merged edge of blobs. Normal prints I will choose a hidden place for these. I've uploaded a picture of an edge with no retractions (left side) so you can see what good layer alignment should look like without a blob caused by travel movements or retractions.
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Sorry I'm getting a bit confused because you said a few posts back that it's not completely a retraction issue. However you now say that every blob is a retraction point which would indicate that it is. The other thing is that you also said that at the temperature you like to print, you do get some stringing which is really why we use retraction. You don't have to put up with stringing just to get good layer adhesion. So, it seems to me that maybe you should increase the retraction amount to prevent the stringing, which will probably cure the blobs.
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Sorry, I'll try to be more clear.
These cubes all have blobs created by retraction. I know this as I've set retraction to take place when it moves from perimeter to infill. However, If I turn this retraction off a blob is still created by the travel move. Initially I thought it was solely a retraction issue.
What confuses me is, why does having retraction have such little effect on the blobs? If this was solely a retraction issue, then surely even bad retraction settings should have an effect.
Temperature may have some affect on blob size, but I doubt it will remove the issue entirely. I will however do some tests just so it is another removed variable.
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Do you print external perimeters first or the other way around. This is a very odd problem, I wonder if you print internal perimeters first whether you will still get these artefacts but you wont care as you wont see them?
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Increase the E jerk setting. I had been getting that since I boosted the acceleration for the x & y, and never did change the jerk settings. I originally had it at a really low value of 20, and changing it to 200 practically got rid of it. I'm using Titan bowden setup to a 1.75mm e3vd6 with a pressure advance of 0.03.
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I restored my extruder to my old settings, the hardcore settings worked but it did distinctly give off the impression that the gears might be ground away reasonably quickly.
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If you read the OP's posts you'll see that He's set the jerk to 1200 (was 300 in any case).
The OP said he was getting stringing as well, so I just think it's simply a matter of too little retraction. Maybe 1.8mm isn't enough - we don't know what length the Bowden tubes are. Maybe S3D is using it's own retraction speed with is overriding the firmware speeds.
Edit. Sorry DJ, we must have been typing at the same time. Thanks for the feedback on the "hardcore" settings - I suspected they might be a bit harsh so it's saved me from trying them.
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There is no Bowden tube, so 1.8mm is a decent amount recommended by E3D for there hot end. Upping this any higher will likely give jams. My retraction speed is 55m/s set by the slicer.
@ DJDemonD - Internal perimeter first, then external, then infill. S3D doesn't give much choice for which is printed first. That and printing external perimeter first can cause overhang issues so it's not the greatest solution either.
If you look above StephenRC, the tests have been done with a few variants of E jerk at both 300 and 1200.
My next tests are going to be upping the extrusion rate in order to 'smooth' out the pressure differences, although this is just a theory. I'll also try temp tests and stringing tests, and possibly higher retraction speeds/distance.
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I am running a Bowden direct drive extruder and my results might surprise some people but I can attest these settings work very very well.
So Gecko have you changed your slicer settings as well? I do not have a part cooling blower and have successfully completed several benches like this one with PLA: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1619976 and 3dbenchy…. I do not have any stringing, oozing or blobbing like when I started.
Warning, I need to tame some of these back as some of them cause my printer to bang around depending on what is being printed but the prints come out amazing
M566 X9000 Y9000 Z12 E9000 ; Set maximum instantaneous speed changes (mm/min) M203 X12000 Y12000 Z375 E12000 ; Set maximum speeds (mm/min) M201 X9000 Y9000 Z150 E6000 ; Set accelerations (mm/s^2) M906 X850 Y950 Z950 E950 I30 ; Set motor currents (mA) and motor idle factor in per cent M572 D0 S0.1
My Slicer is simplify3D and the bridging in it sucks, most overhangs in these models never get bridge mode enabled but I was still able to get amazing results none the less.
Slicer settings:
62mm/s print speed 115mm/s retraction speed 1.85mm retraction 0z hop Outline direction: Outside in Outline overlap: 10% (too much overlap on a well tuned printer will cause bulging like you see I found 10% to be ideal for well tuned estep and filament temp) Only retract when crossing open spaces is unchecked force retraction between layers is checked perform retraction during wipe movement is checked
You might also try (if you have S3d) putting a negative number in extra restart distance if you find blobbing just after a retraction such as -0.02… this will keep less filament from being primed after the retraction. (personally I do not like to solve issues with the slicer and would hunt down the issue causing what you are facing but if all else fails try this setting.
My kids ran off with my benches but the results with snappy XY and snappy extruder completely eliminated any stringing and successfully connected non bridge parameter outlines (S3D bug, they should be treated as bridges) and it did so without the assistance of cooling and a 205c temp on PLA.
Now I just need to find the best jerk settings so my printer does not sound like its banging with every movement of the axis.... I am finding fast moves are the best way, it makes for ultra sooth quality prints with no defects but I need to find the sweet spot for jerk settings to make it maintain the quality that the high speed is giving
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Now I just need to find the best jerk settings so my printer does not sound like its banging with every movement of the axis.... I am finding fast moves are the best way, it makes for ultra sooth quality prints with no defects but I need to find the sweet spot for jerk settings to make it maintain the quality that the high speed is givingFor info, (DC has recently confirmed this), jerk is only used when doing short segmented moves such as circles. So you might have better luck by reducing your acceleration settings.
HTH -
Jerk is the setting i did read his post on that but where the banging occurs with current setting is on the first couple layers of 3d benchy. other prints seem to handle fine but i did reduce the accell to get rid of some ringing at the start of each vase corner.
Currently rerunnung benchy, i might take jerk down a little more.
Something interesting is on benchy one corner of the hull gets over extruded… this does not happen on cubes, i get perfect extrusion and sharp corners kind of scratching my head on that one because extrusion seems to be dialed in as well as retraction