Hi everyone, Adam from Vector3D here. Little update: we now support Bambu Labs skew correction! 🎉 At the time of the video Bambu Labs didn't have skew correction in their firmware so it needed a workaround, but now they do. Bambu Labs have said their implementation is currently still in testing at the (time of writing) so you might get some unintended consequences. That said, from my testing, it seems to work fine. Thanks again Stefan for such a great video covering Califlower!
@rokaskАй бұрын
The V2 is web-only, no more excel or libreoffice. Is there a possibility to get the calculation spreadsheets still? I prefer to own the things I buy.
@makalaga56Ай бұрын
@@rokask Don't know what You mean with web-only. I still can download V2 CaliLantern from vector3D with xlsx and ods files in rar package.
@sjkba11 ай бұрын
Really classy move helping Adam improve his calibration flower and pointing your viewers in his direction! Love it
@jonathanballoch11 ай бұрын
Firstly, I'm sold, but secondly, extremely casual mention Adam's cancer diagnosis! Funny delivery aside, love to see makers supporting makers
@girrrrrrr211 ай бұрын
But I love stepping on stray calibration cubes in the middle of the night
@joachimeuler826911 ай бұрын
Maybe you want to add some spikes on top of the califlower? It could to a much better job than just simple cubes…… 😜
@TheNamelessOne1235711 ай бұрын
@@joachimeuler8269 Btw there is a retraction calibration model with four spikes. Best thing to step on in the middle of the night.
@berberger481411 ай бұрын
holy shit, I can tell this really hurts 🤣
@Leetsch11 ай бұрын
Yeah gives me childhood flashbacks when stepping on legos back then
@andreyansimov544210 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@rcmaniac2511 ай бұрын
This made me happy. When I first started 3D printing, I printed out maybe 50 of the cubes. They were so new that... they were just cubes. No XYZ labeling or brands or whatnot. And I wasn't printing it for dimensional accuracy, I was so new I didn't think that was an important thing at that point, I printed them just to try and get a successful print. "Did the top layer look bad? Did it even get past the first layer?" etc. Fast forward: I've ignored so many of these tests for a simple reason - I just want to print stuff, not spend all my time calibrating my printed. I'm glad to see basically all the printers you tested have small skew and dimensional issues. You have a good point though: what is the acceptable amount of inaccuracy? That's a different topic. But the 2 things on my mind: 1) a pet peeve that you're slowly smashing - ending hearsay in 3D printing. Enough of this "print one of these and you'll have have a good print" "it works for me" "run a temp tower" "no, temp towers are useless, do this calibration print" "make sure you calibrate your e-steps before you check dimensions" "wait, I though dimensions was for checking e-steps" wait wait... stop, can we just get an instruction sheet that we should be doing that produces a reproducible result? I remember you trying some service on Meltzone Podcast where you basically got sets of gcode to run, printed them, then answered some questions. Similar to a game called Q20/20 Questions, and at the end it gave you a printer/filament profile that was "perfect". There's a ton of calibration tests out there, some built into slicers, some separate, some free, some cost money... I'd love for some system, paid or not, that you could run the set of tests, get a profile or similar out of it, and move on. At the time that Q20 profile generator was discussed on Meltzone, it did basics. But now we have printers with flow calibration, input shaper, and more. And one thing not covered by any of them, is they don't take into account wear. Like, imagine getting a new printer, run the first run... it spits some random models out, you answer some questions... it auto-calibrates the machine (hey Prusa, when you gonna add that skew adjustment to the MK4/XL/Mini?), and then you move on. Have the slicer be able to do the same for filament. But then in a month or two, you can do a small print and find out if you need to rerun the calibration or not. A canary of sorts. I made the mistake of using the same brass nozzle for like 4 years, no carbon fiber or whatnot, but I finally went to replace it and found the 0.4 nozzle was closer to 0.55mm. Oops... but I had no real sign of this and it's not like I memorized how well things fit together from 4 years prior. 2) ERRF 2019 had a keynote speaker that was great to listen to: Adrian Bowyer. History and some ideas for things in the future... and he commented on this exact topic. That these were imprecise machines. And he proposed something... if the nozzle could tell when it makes contact with something in more then one dimension, it could be used to calibrate itself. Think: print the infamous 20mm calibration cube, it then cools, then pokes it... and finds out that it's 20.01mm, so it adjusts itself so it's next print is 20mm. Of course, this isn't some ground breaking concept... this is used by CNCs to find their source material, inspection systems, and in the 3-4 years since then (depending on how you want to measure time :P), we've gotten strain gauges on all the things and the Prusa XL literally does this to calibrate nozzle location between tool heads. It isn't fast, but at least you don't need to buy an external camera or similar. But the point is: it's there... right now. "We have the technology" we just need to use it.
@heyitsjay2211 ай бұрын
This is so perfect. Measuring mounting holes and creating a mount has been the best real accuracy test. I use a hole center calibrator. Checking a calibration hole (inner dimension) in an object is very different than measuring a cube. Hole center to center is the best method. Thank you for this video!!!
@lv_woodturner389911 ай бұрын
I bought the Califflower back in Nov 2022. I appreciate the work Adam put into the design. Very much worth the small download fee.
@uiopuiop347211 ай бұрын
tusjak is beginning the new design i heard so. he/she/they is been working on new gender for a while so its good to be back now. i spoke with he/she/they now a fewest day ago
@nikoraasu692911 ай бұрын
@@uiopuiop3472 how can somone be working on a "new gender" lmao, you guys are so out of touch
@uiopuiop347211 ай бұрын
tujsjak is makin it when here system is in dis agreement. @@nikoraasu6929
@franklydoodle35011 ай бұрын
@@nikoraasu6929 hold up let him/her/them cook
@cryingsurrogate11 ай бұрын
@@nikoraasu6929 "Today, I AM A GOD!!!"
@Mindless_One11 ай бұрын
Great Video- I've always used the Cube for quick- "Corner Bulge' and "Ringing" and Tuning in the "Top Layer/Ironing" but remember back in the early RepRap days guys saying don't use it for Measuring and it didn't take long to realize why,,,,, but here we are 10yrs later All the Best-.
@ChrisFloof11 ай бұрын
I never thought about skew correction on my 3D printer until I experienced a lid not aligning fully some weeks ago. The califlower has been a great help correcting for it as well as adjusting the shrinkage in the slicer!
@Brainstormer_Industires11 ай бұрын
You can also just use a dial indicator to check the distance of your travel moves. This eliminates any variables from extrusion width,, shrinkage etc. and purely check the motion system to see if a 20mm travel move is exactly what it should be. Adjust steps/mm from there. I know not everyone has a dial indicator, but they aren't expensive.
@KeksSektor10 ай бұрын
This method will account for steps, but not for skew. But yes, I have done the same on my first pinter.
@Brainstormer_Industires9 ай бұрын
@@KeksSektor Cal cubes don't check for skew either. The sides will still be parallel, and a 25mm cube isn't really big enough to check the edges with a good square. Correcting for skew is really it's own thing.
@glabifrons11 ай бұрын
Great video, but the one part you definitely should have included is *why* it's a bad idea to adjust steps/mm: Because the steps per millimeter can be mathematically calculated based on the number of teeth on your motor's pulley and the pitch of the belt. The only way they can be off is if the belt is stretched. If it's off, it's either shrinkage or under/over-extrusion, either of which should be compensated for in the slicer (as you pointed out).
@scul0011 ай бұрын
Exactly... X/Y/Z steps/mm or Rotation Distance should be mathematically derived, not corrected based on inaccurate plastic measurements. My belt with a 2mm tooth pitch around a 20 tooth pulley WILL move 40mm per rotation. If it doesn't, something is wrong!
@dirkjanvanvliet11 ай бұрын
This is also true for esteps on your extruder. Every filament behaves differently and the best way to adjust, as Stephan briefly mentions, is by adjusting the extrusion percentage in your slicer
@sandrolauer35011 ай бұрын
Hm, but with the cheap belt gears you find in 3d printers the core diameter isn't as accurate as should be. See, if the 20 tooth gear moves 20 teeth around a diameter of let's say 12 mm, 36 mm travel will occur with one full rotation. If the diameter is just 0.2 under you get just 35.4 mm travel. And the rubber belt would just be fine with it because of the flex in the teeth. If we had precision parts we would be happier, but these parts are expensive
@sandrolauer35011 ай бұрын
So I calibrated steps per mm with a caliper clamped to the head, moving towards a robust place of the frame. For each axis. 👍
@glabifrons11 ай бұрын
@@sandrolauer350 That's not how cogged belts work. Unless you have it installed inverted with the flat side towards your cogged pulleys or are using smooth pulleys instead of cogged ones, it's impossible for a belt with a 2mm pitch to move more than 2mm per tooth. Even if it's loose and skips teeth, it's still going to move a multiple of 2mm per tooth.
@joshmyer911 ай бұрын
I love the califlower: after making tweaks, it's a single print that gives me confidence that everything is still working as expected. The older califlower is the only STL I've ever paid for, and I paid mostly for the support files. It was worth every penny, and the new design looks even better. Highly recommended if you are someone who mods their printer, even if you mostly print aesthetic parts: you're gonna need good accuracy on any new mod parts. I especially appreciate what look like caliper supports in the design, as getting the calipers square for all the measurements is the biggest pain the ass through the whole process.
@Beltonius11 ай бұрын
I had always made my own calibration blocks (usually modeled off 1-2-3 machining blocks) with chamfers and radii to avoid the issues you mentioned. The cauliflower looks great and I will have to go pick that up.
@sergetheijspartner200511 ай бұрын
The mark of a good scientist is not "I know everything" but rather "I do not know, how can I learn what I do not know", I used benchys and calibration cubes and still end up with errored prints and knowing that there is better ways to measure and calibrate, made me learn a new skill and I appreciate that, so thank you. I will try it.
@bulgogiprince862511 ай бұрын
Loved the video. I caught on to the Vector3D Califlower a few years ago and it really helped me tune my Ender 3V2. I saw another video awhile back from a youtube creator that was making collector card holders who first mentioned calibrating to a larger dimension due to the percent error you find with a smaller calibration cube. His explanation and Vector 3D really solidified the idea/theory for me. Its funny you had the same issue with measuring with calipers and got him to update the model. Thank you for letting us know there is a new model that we can snag now at no additional cost.
@soundspark11 ай бұрын
Feed those cubes to the shredder then the Artme3D. Just hope the Companion Cube isn't watching!
@arduinoblokodtr369911 ай бұрын
Who is companion cube,the cube with heart on it in portal 1?
@soundspark11 ай бұрын
@@arduinoblokodtr3699 You know don't you?
@arduinoblokodtr369911 ай бұрын
@@soundspark i don't know
@arduinoblokodtr369911 ай бұрын
@@soundspark i don't know
@vegasu941811 ай бұрын
@@arduinoblokodtr3699 who are you, mr tidbit?
@tymoteuszkazubski275511 ай бұрын
This, signle point dimensional calibration is my pet peeve. Two points are an improvement, but I prefer 10-20, shrinkage isn't always perfectly consistent. I once designed calibration square that let you measure both XY shrinkage and skew with 40 data points (technically 38), the only downside was that it had limited capability for measuring internal dimension.
@greyvlad10 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, got excited when the said Guten Tag, German's talking about engineers is like Italian's talking about pizza or pasta, so much passion on it :D
@jawolllinger11 ай бұрын
I haven't trusted prints for calibrating X, y and z rotation distance for quite a while. I bought a dial indicator with 50mm measuring distance and an accuracy of 0.1mm used and it served me well for calibrating lengths. Also I agree that the scew measurements with the califlower are tempting...
@MrHeHim11 ай бұрын
Gates GT2 belts are spec'd to >0.3mm every 92 teeth at a 6.6lbs belt tension. I do just over 7lbs for a passively heated chamber (~65c when printing with a bed temp of 105c). You can find the full spec sheet online rather quickly. The further the tool is from the motor pulley gear the more relative tension effects accuracy. Meaning if you have at most 0.3mm off than it will average out to just over 0.15mm. Everything else is shrinkage and not having your machine square and tramed. With that said, shrinkage is dependent heavily on temps, extrusion speeds (and cooling), color that effects material properties, etc. And you should never expect a perfectly demential print on the most precise printer as every print will have its own unique shrinkage/internal tension.
@aajpeter10 ай бұрын
5:53 I would really appreciate links to the other tuning steps you took - so many stl's and techniques out there just knowing what you used would be valuable, otherwise I'm left trying to recreate the process and wondering if my results are as good. You mention: Extrusion Temp Flow % Retractions Pressure advance
@deathsmilez529722 күн бұрын
They appear to be the built in OrcaSlicer calibration files
@VincentGroenewold11 ай бұрын
I really love your takes on 3D printing, you have a unique understanding in engineering and that shows. I fell into this cube trap as well without even thinking about it... the effect of "this must work as so many use it".
@danielrioux544 ай бұрын
I agree 100% with you. BTW Adam created a new test jig the "Calilantern Calibration Tool" that do the assessment in 3D. I ordered it today and I am looking for my first evaluation. Also, a suggestion: with that many parameters to tune to optimize prints, printer, filament, etc. could it be possible to create a presentation on test methods and their sequence ? I am convinced that many viewer would appreciate it. Keep the good work.
@anniebooo11 ай бұрын
Hi Stefan, we are running a large professional 3D printing farm, and never ever done "calibrations" like this. We are printing some shapes that we have made ourself, to check skew and have a tool that measure travel of the print head manually, and part of maintenance is to go over the mechanical issues. We have slicing profiles (shrinking, material) that we now are dimensionally within our tolerances, which is within 0.1. Best regards, Annie
@andrikurniawan53111 ай бұрын
do u mind share the shape?
@madmatrac11 ай бұрын
@@andrikurniawan531 its definitely one of circle/square/triangle
@carlociarrocchi279311 ай бұрын
When I first started printing I was surprised to see how many people relied on a simple 20 mm size cube measured with a cheap caliper to adjust the steps per mm. Having a good amount of experience with measurements I knew the result would likely be worse than leaving the default values. I'm happy to see someone else pointing out the issue.
@matneu2711 ай бұрын
Yep, the best investment in my shop is a (used) mitotyo caliper. The cheap Chinese crap always loose the zero after switching off and eat button cells due their bad power management.
@ipadize11 ай бұрын
@@matneu27 a WHAT caliper? if thats not a typo im pretty sure you got scammed.
@matneu2711 ай бұрын
@@ipadize oh I am so sorry that I made a typo and luckily you discovered it. I meant the mitotoyo (hope I wrote it right, the letters on my caliper are almost wiped away by heavily usage)
@VolkanTaninmis11 ай бұрын
Important point is: steps/mm is mechanical property that depends on belt type and gear tooth count. For the rest of 99% circumstances, calibration problems all about frimware and slicer settings.
@RoterFruchtZwerg11 ай бұрын
True, but the belts pitch may change with tension
@Apophis-en9pi11 ай бұрын
I don't know how more people don't understand this. You are right it's just fixed. If you have your rotation distance/esteps set up for your specific pulley setup - that's all you need. The rest is slicing and flow tuning. Spread the message!! Don't fuck with rotation distance/esteps!!!!
@issacelkhal786110 ай бұрын
I'm shocked at how thoughtfully constructed this is. The guide pieces to get precise positioning have been spectacular!
@boggisthecat11 ай бұрын
Callipers can vary a fair amount in accuracy. If you get a cheap micrometer then you can use that to calibrate the callipers. Also, be aware that you must manually apply consistent pressure with callipers, while a micrometer should have a friction wheel that applies a set amount of force each time.
@6milesup11 ай бұрын
There are calipers that are called "pressure calipers." They have an extra dial on them that shows how much force you are putting the jaws. If you buy a new one made by Mitutoyo they are about $900. Also, using a cheap micrometer to calibrate your calipers is not really the method to use. Using a "standard" or even a gauge block will work very well. To each his own.
@boggisthecat11 ай бұрын
@@6milesup You can use the micrometer to measure a test piece (such as the maligned 20 mm cube), then use that as your ‘gauge block’. Plastics deform much more than metal or ceramic under load, so by doing this you have a better idea of the final dimension if you are wanting press-fit accuracy. It gets complicated fast, if you want to measure TPU etc. Maybe an optical method is better there. You could use your phone camera for an ad-hoc measure with a reference (e.g. your calliper set to a close value) and some pixel counting. Really depends upon how accurate and precise you want your results to be.
@Brainstormer_Industires11 ай бұрын
You can also use a dial indicator to just check the motion system directly. zero it on some part of the gantry, do a 20mm move, and see if it's exactly 20 mm, no printing required, and no shrinkage or extrusion width to possibly interfere with the measurement
@Fennecbutt11 ай бұрын
Pretty sure caliper accuracy is more than good enough for 0.2mm layer printed parts...aiming for x.xxxxx level of precision with fdm is silly and unnecessary imo.
@boggisthecat11 ай бұрын
@@Fennecbutt With plastics you can get away with less precision, but you still want enough accuracy for fitment. Errors compound, too. A small error here and a small error there can result in something that won’t fit. Squareness / orthogonality of axes should also be considered.
@KiyoshiKatu11 ай бұрын
Good data, and you make a good case for sure! I've often printed my calibration cubes much larger, usually around 100mm, but I really like the additional checks and balances from the califlower! I'll definitely be supporting that project, and once I get my printer set back up, I'll have to look into all of the calibration methods pointed out in this video, especially skew!
@LynxSnowCat11 ай бұрын
I've measured the outside dimensions of stepped features to do this a few times, back calculating the thickness offset for the extrusion, but the simple elegance of averaging the inside and outside is something that I feel silly for not having thought of myself.
@fordgeher11 ай бұрын
Really, I mean Really, and I can't stress this more, YOU REALLY spoke from my heart with this video. I never understood why you should ever tune your printer for dimensions with printed parts. There are sooooo many, and I mean soooooo many influencing factors for plastic parts, especially in 3D-Printing that it just don't make sense. Get a good dial gauge and measure the distance the printer is moving. And check the skew with other proper measurement equipment. If you print different materials you will notice differences in measures, printability and so on and so on. So thank you very much for this video.
@1fareast1411 ай бұрын
5:26 I prefer the calilantern, which is the version of the model with a z component! If you're going to measure a bunch, you may as well fix the skew on all axes. And yes, the shrinkage should be tuned for each material as well, once a base rotation distance has been set.
@3dexperiments11 ай бұрын
Yeah, going to buy the calilantern now. I've printed so many public STLs that didn't quite fit, never sure if it was the model or my printers. The biggest downer with 3D printing IMHO is making parts fit with post processing.
@dougshellusn11 ай бұрын
I felt like the Cali lanterns is harder to hold and get consistent measurements on
@PatrickHoodDaniel11 ай бұрын
I completely agree with this method and this video explains the multitude of variables and how to calibrate and square the machine quite well. I've tried to guide customers to calibrate their machines and most will just not do it at all and assume that the machine is already calibrated from the manufacturer. the only change I would make to the cali-flower is adding a relatively tall tower thus adding more accuracy to the Z axis. The wider, longer, higher measurements you can do will add more accuracy. It would be nice i the material doesn't matter and the measurement were measured at the center of the nozzle from a reference point and the software would compensate for the material and settings used.
@yamie854811 ай бұрын
Thank you! I have been fighting step calibration myths like the mentioned for years now, but every youtuber made a video on this and keeps the myths alive. E-Steps in particular are a very hard thing to explain... Don't calibrate E-Steps, calibrate flow for each filament... Use the steps from the manufacturer X,Y,Z steps should only be dependent on gear ratios, belts and stepper degree, so imperfections are mechanical problems
@grex_hg765411 ай бұрын
100 percent agree,.
@callsignapollo_11 ай бұрын
there's definitely a place for calibrating E-steps though, for instance, if you change components on your extruder that change the gearing, you need to change the e-steps. that way 100mm of filament is actually 100mm and not 112 or 95, then you can fine tune flow per material in much smaller amounts after that.
@yamie854811 ай бұрын
@@callsignapollo_ 100% true, but in most cases the manufacturer will provide the e-steps for your extruder gearing. Those are usually for 1.8° steppers, so in case it's a 0.9° stepper those needs to be converted.
@circleofowls11 ай бұрын
Major props for letting the author of the cauliflower update his design, it's not one I've seen before but I've been meaning to my Voron even more dialed in and it looks like it'd be a big help. I'm fully in agreement with your conclusions. Steps-per-mm are defined by the gearing of your printer. Shrinkage adjustments, line width, etc will dial in a printer far better. And don't forget to print a cooling tower to dial in your fan speeds as well!
@contentnation11 ай бұрын
I used dial indicators to calibrate my axis, just use the full range (10mm in my case) of the dials and make sure to only move in one direction to prevent backslash from the belt. Takes out the whole material tolerances and only focuses on the mechanical parts.
@ADBBuild11 ай бұрын
I do the same. I also used the dial indicator to make sure every axis was adjusted square to each other. Once this is done, you know any error is from something else.
@markbooth306611 ай бұрын
Thank you for confirming my long held suspicions. I've never bothered to print a calibration cube because I wasn't confident that my cheap vernier calipers were accurate enough to make my calibration better rather than worse, but the Califlower being designed for standard 150mm verniers makes a lot more sense. I've just bought the Califlower model, so I look forward to giving it a go once I've fixed my current Octoprint problems.
@Canis.Lupus.Arctos11 ай бұрын
I find those vids/topics fascinating, mostly cuz makes me realize how experience/knowledge dictates much of what one does. Personally, since the very 1st time I've started 3d printing on my 1st machine years ago, I've calibrated it on a per project/material basis.. for me this has always been a given, but then again I went on to study precision mechanics when I was 14'yo and thus have had a deep understanding of many different manufacturing processes and materials for literally decades... Since I also have an engineering degree on mechatronics/robotics, so CNC machines and such are just intuitively simple to understand and thus tweak. But I do realize many enthusiasts lack the same fundamentals, and this is what I like the most about the 3d printing community, folks often times share openly the knowledge and often challenge the "trends" in order to help each other to achieve better results... Kudos for the topics and analyses... I will say thi tho, I do find both my i3Mk3s and P1S to be reliably precise, as long as properly calibrated for the material used, and still is not uncommon for me to tweak the models to compensate for inaccuracies of the machines, after all hobbyist 3d printers are not nearly as accurate/precise as professional grade industrial machines... Even so, w/ the certain measure of knowledge and care one can achieve amazing parts w/ these little machines XD
@albabeto11 ай бұрын
Хорошо сказал.
@Canis.Lupus.Arctos11 ай бұрын
also, I hate when my phone wrongly auto-corrects me (like my comment above), kudos to machines that while maybe not as smart and thus very reliant on us to get things right (as of yet) at least don't pretend to be "smart" and f. us all the time on simple stuff (like writing a message or navigating the city)...(looking at you iPhone/Apple and others).. love my 3d printers cuz whatever tasks that don't need my input they do perfectly well, everything else they do _exactly_ what I command them to do...
@plasticcreations783611 ай бұрын
Why would I leave a bad comment for the 'god' of 3D printing? You clearly have more knowledge and better equipment than me. I really appreciate you taking the time to do things that helps others. Ive never printed a calibration cube because ive never felt the need - maybe ive just been lucky with my printer or the things I print dont need as much accuracy. Sorry to hear about Adams diagnosis. I hope he gets better.
@XxxionxX11 ай бұрын
You should link videos (or another video) for the aforementioned: filament profile tune, optimal extrusion temperature, extrusion flow percentage, tuning retractions, and optimum pressure advance value. I have lots of different links for printer tuning but I always collect more advice because I want to get the best prints 🔥
@pedromerrydelval726010 ай бұрын
Totally agree, that would be amazing, specially given Stephan's atention to detail and perfectionism. It would really help a lot!
@Redo3D11 ай бұрын
One very important factor to having dimensional accuracy is belt quality and consistent tension on the X and Y. I switched my ender 3 v2 print farm to all gates belts and tuned them all exactly the same using spectroid app to 115mhz. I also do skew correction and my prints are absolutely spot on. I have a tolerance of 0.1mm on all of my printers so they are all printing within 100 microns of each other.
@FilamentFriday11 ай бұрын
I disagree. As you state at the end, the Cube can be very useful if used properly. Just measuring X, Y and Z is barely scratching the surface. You can check skew with a square as well or measure diagonally as you mentioned. I use the CHEP Cube for many of those references beyond measuring X,Y & Z
@Lidocain7777 ай бұрын
I've been relying on Adam's Califlower for tuning since it was released. That's the only tuning process I use for skew / dimensional accuracy per material. The most helpful print, IMHO. It's also a great thing knowing you've been working with Adam to further improve it. Makers helping and supporting makers.
@bluerider098811 ай бұрын
When i first started 3d printing i altered the steps per mm, but as i gained more printing experience I came to the same conclusion as you that it was not the proper way to compensate for size error as the majority of it is material shrinkage which varies. I've also found that there are tons of variables including temperatures when printing, i.e hotend, bed, enclosure or ambient temps. I've also found the speed at which the part is printed can affect shrinkage. I think this has to do with the rate at which the filament cools on the part. For example, I've printed a test part and then scaled it. Reprinted the part to verify that the scaling was correct. Then when i would print a batch of those parts the size would change. I suspect this is because the layers have more time to cool as the printer is moving from part to part every layer. I was able to negate this by completing individual parts 1 at a time. Aka if printing 10 parts I'd enable individual part printing where it would fully complete 1 part before starting the next. I guess my point is that if you want to print accurate parts there is not 1 set of variables that will work for all situations. You'll have to adjust based on what your printing.
@IHTACast11 ай бұрын
Stefan, I noticed these issues with the calibration cube myself a long time ago, but I chocked up the issues I was having with just personal error and mistakes. I feel ashamed and foolish for not having though that the print used to calibrate could be the problem. Thank you for this. I have already purchased the cali flower. I'm going to go tune my printer now. Thank you!
@HelenaOfDetroit11 ай бұрын
This is funny to me because I've never printed a calibration cube 😂 For me, I needed to make a thing. So I printed it with super low infill settings and then measured it. After that, I just adjust the size of the print in CAD to what works for the part while keeping in mind the allowable tolerances. But, I'm lazy 😅
@3dFirefly11 ай бұрын
When I calibrated my steps per mm, I used the caliper to measure the hardware how much the X and Y moved for 100mm. like you said in video printed parts shrinks, I compensated for that in slicer settings, filament shrinkage, print stick 100mm long and measure/calculate the difference. I am no pro, but it just made sense to me to do it that way, maybe something to try yourself.
@SneakyJoeRu11 ай бұрын
I agree that the cube isn't perfect at all, but it's a good quick way of checking accuracy in general rather than a tool for adjusting for it. Califlower seems like a nice development, though I'd like to know how can I adjust bambulab x1c with data I get from that print except for in slicer settings for every profile for every nozzle and material I use.
@TripleJAu11 ай бұрын
For any of the bambu labs printers would be good as not everyone owns a x1c 🙂
@FunkyMind11 ай бұрын
Finally! A good youtuber like you had to point this out. I started 3D printing 6 years ago and always tell people that this stupid calibration cube is bad and always recommend something else like the "caliset calibration kit" available on printables.
@thelastengineer863311 ай бұрын
how can i calibrate the z axis?
@anielius54387 ай бұрын
Print it verticality that should work
@Stormmblade7 ай бұрын
Put your printer on its side
@anielius54387 ай бұрын
@@Stormmblade r/technicallythetruth
@USS_Daedalus7 ай бұрын
Bambu User: What is Calibration?
@dougaltolan30177 ай бұрын
Use the depth measuring feature of your caliper to measure the height of a staircase type step (not an individual printer step) That way you will be measuring the difference in height of 2 top surfaces.
@1234fishnet11 ай бұрын
Thanks for helping Vector3D. He's a decent guy and deserves your support.
@mjetdevelopment11 ай бұрын
I can't even put into words how much the world needs this video. Thank you very much.
@HBDE.official5 ай бұрын
The coaster aspect of the califlower is amazing! I always tuned the most in the profiles per filament and that was usually enough to calibrate for differences in measurements. That said, i usually care for specific dimensions and not all of them at once.
@itayst11 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for this. 👍🏽👍🏽 Now I’ll have to go through the hassle of calibrating 5 self built machines 😬
@SeanCMonahan11 ай бұрын
Damn you!
@neevothespaniel6 ай бұрын
I just bit the bullet and bought the Califlower as I’ve been struggling to get anything to print that needs to fit together. 2 prints and a tweak to the extrusion and I’ve just printed a 3 part print and it fitted together perfectly first try. Best $11 I’ve spent on the printer!
@superbrain384811 ай бұрын
hmm never tought to calibrate X /Y Steps by measurements. calibrated them in the past by verifying correct movement with a dial gauge. 1mm commanded should result in 1mm moved.
@SteevyTable11 ай бұрын
I got a dial gauge a couple years ago, why didn't I ever think of this?
@REDxFROG11 ай бұрын
Exactly. People who print cubes measure them and change steps don't understand much.
@chrisl49993 ай бұрын
I’m convinced you sir know exactly what you are doing. Thank you for all these vids.
@SianaGearz11 ай бұрын
The parts come out undersized not only because they shrink, but also due to wrong assumption. You assume that every tooth of 2gt belt has a 2mm pitch; however the belt is manufactured undersized, because it's supposed to preload to nominal pitch while minimising vibration and backlash. You notice that when you adjust the tensioners on your 3D printer, they go quite a way between the belt has its slack out and when it actually feels right, and all this tensioner displacement goes into stretching the belt. And there's yet more leeway, it's in millimetres, it's not at all minor. Unfortunately i forgot what the belt spec tension to size is, and it's going to be different between Gates belt and a Chinese belt anyhow, but from my memory you can't really achieve it without exceeding the maximum recommended lateral loading for your steppers, too much and they may not run smoothly or the bearings may seize up. On a Cartesian driven printer, you expect the tensioning error to be quite anisotropic as well. I'm actually working on a yet different way to calibrate printer XY/skew, it's not going to use calipers, or indeed a print, and i think it'll be better.
@edumaker-alexgibson11 ай бұрын
Yes. Been telling people all of this since 2013. You are correct in every detail in this video. I like Adam's design, I already made something similar but your joint update looks great.
@JandCanO11 ай бұрын
Your per-material scaling factors are in line with what I've seen working in a 3D printing-based production environment, which is reassuring. I wonder if we'll see a specialized filament for calibration with a minimal or precisely known shrinkage factor so we can still do these tests to figure out actual steps/mm
@mrp1zz49211 ай бұрын
I love watching videos explaining measuring objects because its great knowing I have the perfect tool for the job sitting in my tool box! Micrometers for the win baby! Much more accurate than calipers.
@richiesrestorations488311 ай бұрын
If Stefan says calibration cubes are no good for size calibration, I believe him. Stefan is very experienced when it comes to tech and 3D printers. I mean, with the name CNC Kitchen, I've come to learn that the channel and Stefan deserve respect! Thank you Stefan.
@happygiraffe978710 ай бұрын
This is most important video for tuning, also accuracy of best calipers is +- 0.05mm even. So with 20mm you would need a micrometer to measure anything and the plastic melting will have more effect on the size that anything else :)
@theabhominal813111 ай бұрын
dont even have a 3d printer but just got his califlower just to help a little with his terrible situation...
@Topy4411 ай бұрын
Coincidentally I just used the skew compensation in Marlin for the first time about a week ago. I recently finished a 3D printer build I started years ago (and kinda forgot in the corner) which has a very classic "printed parts and threaded rods" frame construction. But the printer I used to print the parts ~5 years ago had a somewhat tilted bed - resulting in a permanently skewed printer, no way to get it square without completely reprinting and rebuilding it. Then I remembered that there was this skew compensation nobody ever talked about in the Marlin config and gave it a go - works great!
@delxinogaming604611 ай бұрын
Big Calibration Cube mafia isn’t going to be happy about this one 😂
@christopherbarron87303 ай бұрын
When i calibrated my machine i just measured the position of the head directly bypassing all the issues with shrinkage, elephants foot, overshoots, and wall growth. To compensate for shrinkage, you should be doing that as an additional layer within the slicer profile. I suppose you could roll it all into 1 calibration value, but if you use more than 1 machine or if you change machines, then instead of using your existing shrinkage values, and just calibrating the machine to ensure they are all accurate and consistent, you have to create different values for every material-printer combination which is a lot of work and profile management especially when you are doing this on a professional level.
@sumynona.0111 ай бұрын
a benchy is still iconic to check print quality though...
@LifeOfBrian8311 ай бұрын
Good to know there is a new Califlower version. All the best for Adam!
@MaxWithTheSax11 ай бұрын
The only thing that would actually cause the printer to be inaccurate is if the sprocket (or screw) is inaccurate. So I agree with you, never change the steps.
@pizzablender11 ай бұрын
Actually I suppose it is the belt tooth spacing. The pulley picks up 16 or 20 teeth in a rotation, and the belt determines how long a distance that is. Thus, belt tension plays a role.
@mjetdevelopment11 ай бұрын
It's the belt tension too. Elongating the belt elongates the part. Very very small effect though.
@MaxWithTheSax11 ай бұрын
@@mjetdevelopment Yes, but only the dynamic stretch of the belt. If it gets longer over time that shouldn't matter
@MaxWithTheSax11 ай бұрын
@@pizzablender The teeth are only to prevent slipping. All that matters is the diameter of the sprocket. If your belt is so stretched that it slips you have worse things to worry about than accuracy.
@mjetdevelopment11 ай бұрын
@@MaxWithTheSax No. The belt never skips, but if you stretch the belt, then for the equal number of teeth passing the pulley, with a stretched belt the gantry travels bigger distance.
@dirtdart8111 ай бұрын
Building my own ratrig this week, now I know exactly how I'll calibrate it!
@RAMXC11 ай бұрын
I think we need an ECO version of the CaliFlower. The skew calibration is a one time thing. While the X Y an Z is after change of filament test. A simple design that uses less plastic and prints faster is needed for just filament testing.
@Foodgeek11 ай бұрын
I’ve tried the calibration cubes on both my Mk3S+ and MK4 and didn't feel a need to change anything. When I print parts that need dimensionally accurate, they seem to fit with even tight tolerances. If it ain't broke…
@hkravch11 ай бұрын
Your stepper motor is the most precise part in your printer. Changing stepper is always the wrong solution.
@olafmarzocchi619411 ай бұрын
I appreciate the mention of different shrinking for different materials. People calibrate often without thinking about it
@michaelbuckers7 ай бұрын
I've been talking about this since 2015. Everyone called me an idiot. Apparently people would listen to e-celebs, but listening to common sense is not a thing.
@harryhirsch363711 ай бұрын
Just ripped apart my 12V Ender 3 clone to upgrade it to 24V. This is very good advice on correct calibration after it's full reassembly. Thanks! 👍
@yru250111 ай бұрын
IMO you should always make your machine square. Period. Shame it takes so much time for community to wake up to the basics.
@REDxFROG11 ай бұрын
Software hacks to compensate bad constructions are no good. But when it comes about bed mesh leveling it's often difficult... because you can't simply tell that person buy new beds until you find a completely flat one 😅
@claws6182111 ай бұрын
@REDxFROG Especially for beds with larger or fancier platens. A 500x500mm chunk of cast aluminum 4-8mm thick isn't a cheap thing. Services or tools to flatten the surfaces aren't cheap either of they become necessary. And you can't use them at all if that platen comes with a special textured surface on it or the bed heater comes welded in place or there are magnets glued "permanently" to one face, or if it comes powder-anodized for grounding purposes.
@SeanTaffert11 ай бұрын
I bought my copy of Adam's Califlower when it first came out. Brilliant! Both my home machines are dialed in because of Adam's great work. Nice to see others in the community agree.
@BelviGER11 ай бұрын
Thank you After years of trying to explain exactly this in facebook groups and always being shut down with "but youtubers use it" i had kind of given up the topic
@bigtreetech511711 ай бұрын
We don't know how that cranium fits in there. Your videos are pure class!
@loughkb2 ай бұрын
I wanted to add that in calibrating my own Prusa MK4S, with the cauliflower, I noticed a difference between PLA from the same manufacturer with different colors. A significant difference in shrinkage with the black shrinking much less than the beige. So additives for color seem to affect the plastic shrinkage as well. If you're really concerned with dimensional accuracy, you might need to do a calibration test on each new role of filament even if it is the same material.
@andyb775411 ай бұрын
Yes, this was new to me! I was a cube user until I saw this video. Thank you for your time and videos, keep them coming.
@ajosepi197611 ай бұрын
Literally printing this now because this video. Hope it works out as well as you say. So far you have not lead me astray.
@Spartacusse11 ай бұрын
On my 2019 Ender 3 non-pro v1, which I completely disassembled and rebuilt as square as I could using tin foil shims, I calibrate steps with a dial gauge, e-steps extruding 100mm, extrusion flow with a 2 wall box and compensate per filament in CURA's horizontal shrinkage setting. The plugin called Material Settings allows me to enable the shrinkage setting on the material, when I select each material it changes the settings on the profile automatically.
@Drew_Summerfield11 ай бұрын
Great video. I appreciate the idea of not using steps per mm to adjust scale, I configure my steps per mm by reading the actual travel of the machine with a dial indicator, so I know that any dimensional error I get in my prints are results of print settings not hardware configuration.
@isthattrue108311 ай бұрын
I said this a long time ago. There's also expansion and contraction in the machine, belt tension changing, per filament spool differences (no two are exactly identical), z-offset, motor steps, acceleration and de-acceleration, etc. I always go for a +/- 0.2mm.
@joachimeuler826911 ай бұрын
Just bought my license of Califlower (it is my pleasure to support your friend), and now I’m excited what it will tell me…
@webslinger201111 ай бұрын
Tension of the belts also affect dimensions. Error does scale up on bigger prints.
@JD_JR11 ай бұрын
I bought the Calilantern (calibration latern) from him a few months back and calibrated my machine. It was a ton of work but I now have very precise parts and I know what to tweak or check if I need to make adjustments.
@dan-nutu11 ай бұрын
Sorry, I figured out the typo in "calibaration" but what is "full latern"?
@charliesretrocomputing7 ай бұрын
I don’t even use calibration cubes to calibrate, I just use them as a test print after changing filament or leveling the bed to make sure prints come out properly. It’s a great little test!
@curtkeisler762311 ай бұрын
I love the color Cube and feeding the numbers back into my printer with the same filament that I use all the time made them more dimensionally accurate and it was really wonderful. It is a lot of work but once you get those X and Y numbers Your Parts come out way better and it's worth it
@ZybusterFPV11 ай бұрын
great point on no current systemic way to determine skew, happy customer of the Califlower supporting Adam who provided a great solution. Saves so much headache when designing functional parts.
@CyBerJak11 ай бұрын
Over the years I've not commented much on anything. But this one rang out to me. THANK YOU for doing this. So many things I've said in past finally said by someone that is listened to. Deffo going to look into this califlower I like the idea of it and not only is the price reasonable but a good cause. Hope adam has a good outcome from the news he got.
@Electheo11 ай бұрын
I completely agree! Never found the cube useful for dimensions, it's just a quick print to get a general impression of the print settings. Also, I really like this "mythbuster" type of video. There are so many of these wrong impressions in the community! You're doing all of us a service :)
@MitutoyoEurope10 ай бұрын
A great use of calipers, keep up the good work!
@Repkord11 ай бұрын
As tempting as it is to leave a shitty comment because you told me to I'm really glad to see you say the quiet part out loud here. I think there was a time not long ago that cubes were "good enough" given that the machines just weren't as capable. Times have changed, machine abilities have improved and so new tools are now needed. I suspect we will see more and more specialized variants too for specific tests as the "one size fits all" approach for calibrating just doesn't cut it anymore.
@101rotarypower11 ай бұрын
Thank You Stefan, your videos on these 3D printing topics are under rated for how clear and digestible they are for normal and casual hobbyists. Learn so much here about topics I dont see others addressing let alone offering solutions to! Thank You!
@the-matrix-has-you5 ай бұрын
What I trust in my 14 years of Mechatronics Engineering career is my Calipers, Miter and my trusty Laser measuring tools. I have never printed a benchy or any other calibration shapes ever and don't need them... Use Proper tools measure your printer dimensions make sure all dimensions are accurate from one side to others. Use simple measuring tools keep it simple! screw every connection with a good clicking torque wrench step by step count your steps. If you do have a Printer chasis that is bent ofcourse no matter what you do you can not calibrate that machine. Trust simple Math,Simple Tools not calibration shapes! Don't forget Math,Physics are universal. Custom designs are not!
@dial-upking11 ай бұрын
I always kind of wondered about the error of measuring a small cube vs a big cube, but I never thought about the rest of what you talked about. This was a really neat video to watch.
@chuckthetekkie11 ай бұрын
I primarily have been using the "cube" as a first print just to make sure the printer is actually working (just ask that half printed Voron cube with a snake coming out of it). Then I worry about tuning and calibration later. I've bought a few things from Adam like the Wire-Stripping adapter in Feb 2022, his workbench schematics and his Califlower.