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Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter  

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JasonMakesStuff
(@jasonmakesstuff)
New Member
Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

I have been having this issue consistently and I cannot seem to get to the bottom of it. I keep getting gaps in the perimeters and where the solid infill meets the perimeter causing issues in the finish of the print. I am also getting some misshapen circles as you can see in this test piece. Anyone have any ideas on what could be causing this.

I've tried changing, extrusion width, extrusion multiplier, calibrating e-steps, recalibrating printer, nyloc bed levelling, changing the live-z, changing filament, changing model, changing nozzle and nozzle size, changing from arachne to classic and slowing print speeds etc. Nothing seems to work. I am using standard prusa presets so no crazy speeds anyway. I really need to get this sorted asap as I need to get a print done 

Napsal : 30/03/2023 10:21 am
Neophyl
(@neophyl)
Illustrious Member
RE: Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

Its not software, this is a symptom of a physical printer issue.  Check the usual suspects, pulley grub screws, belt alignment and tensions etc.

Napsal : 30/03/2023 10:42 am
senexfaciens
(@senexfaciens)
Eminent Member
RE: Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

While I agree with Neophyl above that the printer should be inspected to ensure no physical cause, that does look like a flow control calibration problem to me.  I would download SuperSlicer, which is a fork of PrusaSlicer that adds various calibration prints, and run the Filament Flow Calibration.  It also sounds like you're on an MK3 family printer (which I don't have, so I'm not as familiar with) and you might want to do this Linear Advance calibration https://help.prusa3d.com/article/linear-advance_2252

Napsal : 30/03/2023 2:26 pm
Diem
 Diem
(@diem)
Illustrious Member

I'm sure @neophyl is right.  Make sure your filament is dry (what are you using? A lot of white filaments are tricky) and then run a first layer 'Z' calibration and show us the result *on the print sheet*.  If you are concerned about the body of your prints then a small cube would help us too.

It's always easier to diagnose from familiar designs.

Cheerio,

Napsal : 30/03/2023 4:44 pm
karl-herbert
(@karl-herbert)
Illustrious Member
RE: Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

@jasonmakesstuff

On which printer was this printed? If it's a Prusa MKx - have you also inspected the hotend, especially the short PTFE tube?

wbr,

Karl

Statt zu klagen, dass wir nicht alles haben, was wir wollen, sollten wir lieber dankbar sein, dass wir nicht alles bekommen, was wir verdienen.

Napsal : 30/03/2023 5:18 pm
JasonMakesStuff
(@jasonmakesstuff)
New Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

Hello, it's a PRUSA MK3S. I haven't inspected the hot end further than changing out the nozzle and cleaning with a brass brush. 

Napsal : 30/03/2023 9:03 pm
JasonMakesStuff
(@jasonmakesstuff)
New Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: Potential Under-Extrusion at the Perimeter

This was just a white PLA from Fillamentum however, the issue doesnt appear to be material specific as I have had the same issue with multiple other brands and colours including prusament. I agree I could print a small cube to test it I shall endeavour to do that soon. 

Posted by: @diem

I'm sure @neophyl is right.  Make sure your filament is dry (what are you using? A lot of white filaments are tricky) and then run a first layer 'Z' calibration and show us the result *on the print sheet*.  If you are concerned about the body of your prints then a small cube would help us too.

It's always easier to diagnose from familiar designs.

Cheerio,

 

Napsal : 30/03/2023 9:06 pm
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