How to make filament profiles available with custom printer?
 
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How to make filament profiles available with custom printer?  

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ejeklint
(@ejeklint)
New Member
How to make filament profiles available with custom printer?

Hi, I'm new with PrusaSlicer so please bear with me. 🙂

I'm using PrusaSlicer with a custom printer, a Snapmaker 2.0 A350. Works great and PrusaSlicer is now my goto slicer (from Simplify3D which seems to be defunct. Now, I'm a big fan of the filaments from add:North and they all have PrusaSlicer profiles. But how to I make them available to my custom printer? I guess I have to patch the ini-file for profiles but I don't know where to find them... any hints? I'm using 2.4alpha4 on an Intel MacBook Pro.

Best Answer by Neophyl:

How are you running alpha 4 ? there isn’t even an alpha 4 tag on GitHub yet, just alpha 3. 

Anyway the filaments are vendor locked to specific vendor profiles. To use them on other vendors you have to select one by selecting a machine that can access it, such as a Prusa machine and then there a detach preset button. Once it’s detached you can then save it as a copy. At that point your ‘new’ filament becomes accessible to any printer, as long as there are other restrictions in the compatible with fields. 
One of the reasons the filaments are vendor locked is that they often include specific linear advance values tailored to the printer which won’t be applicable to other printers so be sure to remove or modify those settings in your new saved copy.  

Vendors spaces are the new way that PS organises profiles while the compatible with fields are the ‘old’ way but both can and are used to limit things. Even Prusa Mmu printers don’t have access to all the profiles for filament that the non mmu ones can use. 

Also remember that any profiles created/used in an alpha are completely separate form those stored and saved on a full or RC release so any you create now in an alpha will have to be copied over.  The simplest way to do that is to use the export>config bundle option and the. The import config bundle to load. A config bundle will save any non standard custom profiles to a file. It’s the easiest way to transfer custom profiles around from machine to machine (and alpha to beta to rc ) and also is a good way to make backups. 

This topic was modified před 3 years by ejeklint
Napsal : 15/10/2021 11:30 am
Neophyl
(@neophyl)
Illustrious Member

How are you running alpha 4 ? there isn’t even an alpha 4 tag on GitHub yet, just alpha 3. 

Anyway the filaments are vendor locked to specific vendor profiles. To use them on other vendors you have to select one by selecting a machine that can access it, such as a Prusa machine and then there a detach preset button. Once it’s detached you can then save it as a copy. At that point your ‘new’ filament becomes accessible to any printer, as long as there are other restrictions in the compatible with fields. 
One of the reasons the filaments are vendor locked is that they often include specific linear advance values tailored to the printer which won’t be applicable to other printers so be sure to remove or modify those settings in your new saved copy.  

Vendors spaces are the new way that PS organises profiles while the compatible with fields are the ‘old’ way but both can and are used to limit things. Even Prusa Mmu printers don’t have access to all the profiles for filament that the non mmu ones can use. 

Also remember that any profiles created/used in an alpha are completely separate form those stored and saved on a full or RC release so any you create now in an alpha will have to be copied over.  The simplest way to do that is to use the export>config bundle option and the. The import config bundle to load. A config bundle will save any non standard custom profiles to a file. It’s the easiest way to transfer custom profiles around from machine to machine (and alpha to beta to rc ) and also is a good way to make backups. 

Napsal : 15/10/2021 10:14 pm
ejeklint se líbí
ejeklint
(@ejeklint)
New Member
Topic starter answered:
How to...

Sorry, just a typo. 4 is so close to 3... 🙂

Many thanks for your clear explanation; I wouldn't have figured that out by myself. Works like a charm!

Napsal : 16/10/2021 11:45 am
RU's nephew
(@rus-nephew)
Eminent Member
RE: How to make filament profiles available with custom printer?

I'm having trouble finding a "detach" button. Can you help me out?

Napsal : 11/04/2023 1:58 am
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