Have you ever noticed that you printed TOO FAST? Oh, and check out our CNC Kitchen products at cnckitchen.store/ or at our resellers www.cnckitchen.com/reseller
@tslee8236 Жыл бұрын
You don't drive a car at its top speed! 😂
@MrDrake333 Жыл бұрын
Nice work, just a small thought, if the nozzle need a longer distance for the filament, then maybe the path of the filament in the nozzle could be changed to a circular downward path and end in the tip. A bit like the heat pipe in a water tank.
@Atenjo Жыл бұрын
@Stefan, You asked for an idea for your test pieces - how about Archimedean chords as 100% infill and 0 perimeter? This should allow you to reach the speed more likely. General thoughts on flow rate: When I have many identical parts to print, I often take the effort to set the layers to a different temperature for increasing the flow rate even further. It would be nice if there were a function in the slicer for this - a temperature dependency on the flow rate, or, in reality, a temperature compensation, because our material does not reach our set temperature. Perhaps we have a deviation between the measured value in the hotend and the actual temperature in the material due to the high extrusion rate. If you follow this idea further, it should be possible to establish a relation between the heating element's power and the extruder's feed rate, taking into account the thermal conductivity to consider the resulting delay in temperature correction. Therefore, I do not believe that these settings can be adjusted via firmware, as temperature changes must be made in advance. Unfortunately, I am not a programmer, but I am really interested in whether this could be used to tune the flow rate of ANY 3D printer without making changes to the hardware. Tüdelü 👋
@MrMalaman Жыл бұрын
yes ! very poor layer adhésion issues specially with petg (X1C). days of tunning (slow down cooling and flow rate, increase temp).
@PhilippensTube Жыл бұрын
Could you do a check on a Voron at high speed? Just to see if this is a generic fast printing issue or unique to the Bambu.
@gizmobowen Жыл бұрын
As always, another thorough and professionally produced video. Your content is always top tier.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@Wikcentral Жыл бұрын
As always, an educated, scientific, unbiased 3d printing informative video.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@DzzD Жыл бұрын
Great that you finally make a video on this topic ! Bambulab + CHT Nozzle is amazing, now need a bit more heater and cooling
@DzzD Жыл бұрын
@@gustavbondeus6767 I know, I tested both a monthe ago, clone and original (two monthes ago), and come to the same conslusions, I even get in touch with bondtech about this and they was pretty interrested by this sucject ;)
@4techs Жыл бұрын
Saustarkes Video! Beantwortet alle Fragen! Vielen Dank dafür!
@thenextlayer Жыл бұрын
Amazing video (as usual) Stefan. I'm glad that I can always depend on you doing proper experiments, because SOMEONE in the community needs to do it, and I don't think I have the stamina or work ethic to do this level of experimentation :) Keep up the good work.
@Jynxx_13 Жыл бұрын
I printed my Trident 350 parts with my X1 using ABS+ on generic ABS settings. I didn't notice any part strength concerns during assembly, but now I know to do PM checks more diligently. Thanks for the info Stefan
@coltenmeredith8899 Жыл бұрын
It will be an upgrade for sure
@boonjabby Жыл бұрын
Second this. Will definitely be checking also
@SvRider512 Жыл бұрын
I came for the Pink Floyd.
@danielcoffaro6569 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I have noticed pretty bad layer adhesion and really appreciate the help in understanding the issue
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Glad it helped!
@NanashiRyuu Жыл бұрын
I just got my first printer and was trying to think about what was causing the change in gloss between layers when I stumbled on your video before bed. You saved me at least an hour of parsing through unhelpful reddit threads.
@seashadow5239 Жыл бұрын
Great video! For what it is worth, my old Fortus 250 (industrial printer) runs ABS at 305C and has a meltzone nearly 40mm long. And that machine has extremely tight temperature controls and uses quality thermocouples for temperature monitoring. Because of that I have become way more comfortable with pushing Temps through the roof while printing.
@iskandartaib Жыл бұрын
To print stronger functional parts faster I use a tip from one of your earlier videos - print wider lines. For a LOT of my printing these days I'm using 0.8mm lines with a 0.4mm nozzle. With Cura 5, thin walls don't suffer, since the slicer will generate thinner lines when it needs to. You still need a higher flow hot end, of course, since printing wider lines at the same linear speeds means more plastic per unit time. Luckily my Artillery Sidewinder X2 has a Volcano hot end.
@matenorthАй бұрын
Have you noticed extrusion line weakness since lines are parallel and not ironed using 0.8mm extrusions?
@iskandartaibАй бұрын
@matenorth Sorry, I don't follow. The lines between layers remain the weak points, as they do in all FDM prints, while the borders between printed lines are comparatively tough. The reason you can print 0.8mm lines with a 0.4mm nozzle is that there's a flat area at the bottom of the nozzle that is wider than the orifice, and this flattens out the wider line. I suppose this IS analogous to "ironing" the line.
@matenorthАй бұрын
@@iskandartaib More than 0.5mm lines don't iron the next line since it exceeds the flat surface of the nozzle so the lines are not fused properly. At least that's what the community says.
@iskandartaibАй бұрын
@@matenorth I can't say I have ever heard anyone (let alone "the community") say this. See what Stefan here has to say about it, he actually did experiments to see what the effects were, he concluded you got an increase in strength. I only found out this was possible from watching that video. Works very well for me, I use it for maybe 90 percent of my printing. Reduces printing time to about 60 percent.
@qingyuhu Жыл бұрын
AWESOME video!!! Upgraded to 0.6 nozzle and print quality went to the toilet! Thanks for the tip on the extrusion rate, will try it! Thank you! Really appreciate your work! Hope one day someone makes an after market hotend that can use standard V6 nozzles!
@SirSpence99 Жыл бұрын
You can replicate almost all of the benefits of a 0.6 nozzle by changing extrusion widths to 0.6 while using a 0.4 nozzle. You lose the ability to do layers that are 0.4mm+ but you gain being able to do 0.1 or less. You also get much better quality. In almost all cases, the 0.6 nozzle print speed increase is a result of the larger widths, not the higher maximum flow rate. It sounds like you might be pushing that. The cht style nozzle has a significantly higher boost to flow rate than going to a larger nozzle. Same for the volcano style setups. The trick is to print your outer layers at a smaller width and the inner layers much, much larger. I'm able to get away with half of my prints times are typically from the external perimeter, even with infill values of 50%. You almost can't see the layer lines. Only the seams are readily visible.
@magicgundam Жыл бұрын
Yes! Been waiting for this... I've assumed the speed would compromise strength, so it's great to see it go through your usual battery of tests.
@davydatwood3158 Жыл бұрын
When I first got the X1C I banged out a few parts at the default settings, and noted that the print quality was pretty good. Then I cut everything in half (from Bambu's defaults) and discovered this made the print quality *amazing*. As someone who's mostly printing ABS and then sanding and finishing it to look like not-3d-printed, running the X1C at 50% of nominal and 0.12mm layers still gets me parts in half the time the Ender-5 did, and those parts end up needing about a quarter of the sanding and finishing work that the Ender-5's production did.
@justinmurray8582 Жыл бұрын
Hi there what size nozzle are you running on you X1C while printing ABS
@davydatwood3158 Жыл бұрын
@@justinmurray8582 The standard 0.4mm. I'm usually printing at 0.12mm layers and trying to capture fairly small details on many things, so a larger nozzle isn't worth it most of the time. The exceptions don't come up often enough to bother with building up a hotend with a bigger nozzle.
@mrmccain9 Жыл бұрын
I’ve had a lot layer adhesion problems with Polymaker ASA with stock Bambulab ASA profiles. Ended up slowing things down and turning down part cooling to get acceptable strength. Definitely going to look into this mod! Thanks Stefan!
@anon-means-anon Жыл бұрын
I know this is 6 months old, but I have been turning the cooling fan completely off for polymaker ASA and layer adhesion has been great.
@snample_ Жыл бұрын
i swear i could listen to the line 'hi im stefan' on loop for like 10 hours, the way you say it is simply beutiful
@Trevellian Жыл бұрын
Bambu Labs said some months ago that they will be releasing their own *high-flow* nozzles. Hope they offer hardened nozzles for abrasive materials, as most current high flow nozzles aren't hardened.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Oh, I that's cool!
@ivyr336 Жыл бұрын
They seem very "agile". Constantly improving and taking in community feedback.
@mbrick6 ай бұрын
Wondering if they will also release a new nozzle design similar to the A1 series that doesn't require a full hotend. Maybe on the next X1 release? Hopefully also backwards compatible.
@olavodias3 ай бұрын
I really love the content made by this channel. Steffan (I hope I spelled it right) is not only a great engineer, but also a very good teacher. I learned a lot from this channel.
@Keith-um1pj Жыл бұрын
Still a newbie and a former machinist I thank you for insight into issues I've been experiencing with my X1 printer and it's settings. My Ender 3 S1 Pro with Sonic Pad tuned produces faster, good finished and parts of solid structural integrity of a phone holder, clip style. Using the same material, settings (temp/flow) X1 produced gummy weaker parts that failed under the stress of the design. Again being new (December 2022) I wasn't understanding the "why's" for such failures. I will be looking into your suggested mods and settings. Thanks for your insightful efforts.
@hen3drik Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the scientific and especially concise context. Everyone should draw the necessary conclusions for themselves. Personally, I find 12mm³/s to be completely sufficient. Great video!
@iDoPew Жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Made pretty much the same experiences with the aftmermarket hotend + CHT. Currently my go to hotend + nozzle combo for the x1c. Looking forward to a hardened version.
@KimHarderFog Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the anti-april-fools warning in the title
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Just click-bait 😅
@genericpenguin Жыл бұрын
@@CNCKitchen The good kind. April Fool's day gets old quickly.
@Donorcyclist Жыл бұрын
April fools day is one of the worst.
Жыл бұрын
How do I find out the volume/s?
@stephenteitgenengineering Жыл бұрын
@you can check the volume in the slicer
@Pamesahne Жыл бұрын
I have bought the hotend and nozzle linked in the description and was able to reliably get to around 38mm^3 before visible changes between layers. Incredible upgrade for my P1S!
@alejandroperez5368 Жыл бұрын
Finally. A video about something I realized a long time ago from many videos prasing klipper-enabled machines and their ridiculous speeds. But I still did not hear an explanation of how the increased part cooling fan speeds, that comes with the increase in print speed, affect layer strength...
@Liberty4Ever Жыл бұрын
I love your practical scientific 3D printer testing. This is very useful information, and you provide a great education on important subjects most people don't consider, allowing us to understand our 3D printers and the 3D printing process to gain optimal results. Thank you!
@timothysands5537 Жыл бұрын
Always happy to learn from your videos Stefan. I hope you and your work-family are doing well with the work life balance.
@timowittenberg Жыл бұрын
I had the same problems with my X1C. Thanks for the solution.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@jamUSA24 Жыл бұрын
As always, an objective no nonsense fact based scientifically tested approach to solving a real problem. This is my go to channel when I need to research issues related to 3D printing.
@tatatazemefoo Жыл бұрын
When I make parts for press fitting bushings , I use concentric infill to reduce accelerations and keep print speeds faster at 100 percent infill. Should help with your coupons too.
@controlfreak19638 ай бұрын
Polymaker high speed pla is a good option to handle the high speed issue. This was an excellent video that showed me where to focus on these issues on my Bambu.
@dgschrei Жыл бұрын
Awesome video as always. What this actually makes me wonder, is whether the good old 2.8mm filament might be due for a bit of a comeback. Changing the diameter of the filament affects the feed rate by the inverse square of the proportional change in filament diameter. Meanwhile the distance from the hotend wall to the center of the filament only rises linearly (but so also does the surface area available for heat transfer). So the question basically becomes: Is plastic such a bad conductor of heat that fully melting a 2.8mm filament takes more than 2.56 times as long as 1.75mm filament. If that is not the case , the achievable flow rate for 2.8mm filament should be higher in a heating zone of the same length. Thinking about this further this is probably one of the reasons why for bigger extrusion systems the pellets are usually not melted by heating them externally but rather through the friction imparted by the feed screw. In a system like that the flow rate of material and the amount of energy transferred into the material should be largely coupled as long as you adjust the turn rate of the screw to always have the same pressure in the system.
@MikeM8891 Жыл бұрын
US mechanical engineer here, I really appreciate that the strengths were also given in ksi. 👍
@gilbertmckown6161 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for not doing the dumb shit on April fools like releasing a pointless waste of time video. This video is so great and informative!!!
@mikecontreras5190 Жыл бұрын
Ah I have noticed this as well up to this point I have just been setting my print rate to 50% on the X1 for my "quality" prints but controlling the volumetric flow rate is way smarter. Thanks for the tips and the research!
@cai0proenca Жыл бұрын
13:17 who else though he would say "with great speeds comes greats responsibilities"?
@JohnyPatrick Жыл бұрын
Such an informative video. Thanks! This is a worthy upgrade for a printer that is possibly the most capable in the market at the moment so thank you for showing this.
@leafydialupking1 Жыл бұрын
So now we need super slicer to let us vary extrusion temperature based on volume flow rate with a comp value for heat up time just like with the fan. I’ve wanted this feature to lower the temp during bridges for a while.
@Locane256 Жыл бұрын
Can you please do an updated "getting started" video for newbies who just want to print things like shop vac adapter parts, or casings for drill bit organizing or the million different clasps and hooks and strange shapes that would be helpful for wood shop organizing? I've never used CAD software before - I'm looking for something like "buy this printer, with these accessories, install them this way, use this software, buy this filament for X job, this filament for Y job", etc
@Locane256 Жыл бұрын
What about 3d resin printing? How does it stack up against "traditional" 3d printing?
@Allazander Жыл бұрын
Another nice video that's very informative. I've already ordered the replacement hotend so that I can use my existing V6 nozzles in my X1C if I want to but now I'm ordering a couple of those CHT nozzles made to match the Bambu Lab nozzle length. Yes, the replacement hotend/heatsink with removable/changeable nozzles is expensive to start with but when you consider it can used for many inexpensive nozzles rather than having to replace the comparatively costly Bambu Lab options every time your nozzle wears out, they end up much less expensive in the long run and offer more variation. That and they make changing nozzle sizes/types much faster, no more having to break down the whole carriage assembly and swap entire hotends just to change nozzle size. Bambu only offers stainless steel and hardened steel while V6 style nozzles come in brass, plated copper (my favorite) and various specialized nozzles like ruby, titanium or obsidian plus many other variations/combinations of tip style/metals. I'll never need most of those since I normally use plated copper or hardened steel when it's needed but I like having the option of using my collection of plated coppe/brass nozzles back, not to mention being able to use the V6 style hardened steel nozzles that I already own rather than having to buy Babmu hotend replacements. I'll keep ordering the Bambu Lab hotends for the hardened steel nozzles when I need them, the AliExpress aren't much cheaper and I trust the quality of the Bambu slightly more. AliExpress can be great but you never know what you might end up with (off center holes, poorly machined surfaces/threads, low quality materials, etc.).
@JohnOCFII Жыл бұрын
The standard Tips & Tricks of successful FDM printing really seems to change once you cross that 100mm/sec threshold. Thanks for starting us on the proper education!
@paintballercali Жыл бұрын
It's awesome to see e3d makes bambu high flow nozzles now.
@TolisOnLine Жыл бұрын
11:52 - Better to print the tensile samples one by one, for less cooling between layers & thus better cohesion. What you believe?
@JoeyBlogs007 Жыл бұрын
Very useful information. Thanks. I bet the manufacturer is taking notes.
@TheTsunamijuan Жыл бұрын
I have had a smoothieware delta for the last about 7 years. It has been my workhorse till it was damage in a earthquake. With the stupid amount of time I have put on this printer (wish i had a hour meter but just not possible at this point). It was the first printer I owned with the capabilities of going into the 200mm/s - 250mm/s range. I feel like your findings mirror what I learned over the years with that printer. If I wanted to print fast, part strength often suffered, and even details at times. I would often run it much slower than it could go, even more so when printing smaller plate volumes. You might also want to consider revisiting annealing the parts that you found previously weak. Not as big of a deal on PLA. But for ABS, and Nylons you can see noticeable differences. Its more noticeable on these materials if you run a high bed temp and chamber temperature. As you can experience annealing while printing, when doing multi hour prints in these materials.
@williammartin9751 Жыл бұрын
Really interesting flow tests! Great to see those aftermarket options performing so well. The standing tests are pretty useless though. Since they’re in batches, the layer time is many times higher and there’s lots of time to cool down. Printing 12 samples 200mm/s is going to end up extruding on plastic pretty much just as cold as 12 samples at 50mm/s
@Mytagforhalo Жыл бұрын
Whelp, I was wondering how long it would take, but here we are. That's an instant purchase for me. Thanks for testing Stephan
@OldCurmudgeon3DP Жыл бұрын
I've seen the banding on PETG much more than PLA. If I go much hotter though stringing is an issue.
@TutorialBaker Жыл бұрын
I've noticed this after printing 330 hours with my bambu x1c. Been printing with PETG a lot and when i switched to PC the performance were worse. I was trying to anneal the prints, with PETG , to compensate for that with SOME improvement but not enough. Test done with ERYONE PETG 255°C hot end, 200 mm/s (standard profile) 10% Fan MAX. So the parts printed with PETG at those settings are now much more brittle than 60 mm/s and tend to break like PLA. Instead of deforming and yielding like PETG printed on a ender3 at 60 mm/s (for example). I absolutely want to try the 3rd party hotend with the CHT "like" nozzle. THANK YOU STEFAN!
@leochen4891 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the explanation and test. I confirm using the default bambu ASA setting results in poor layer adhesion. I was able to get acceptable results by setting the speed to 50% of the preset. I feel your suggestion of limiting the max flow rate is a simpler and more reliable way to achieve the same.
@ManjaroBlack Жыл бұрын
I've thought about posting about this. I'm glad you are sharing. Tuning to a flow rate is what I've always done, since my super racer is faster than most materials can handle. So what I do to utilize the speed is maximize the flow rate and then lower my layer height until I either hit my max speed or smallest layer height.
@travistucker7317 Жыл бұрын
How fast does that mean you end up printing?
@ManjaroBlack Жыл бұрын
@@travistucker7317 at most, I print quality parts at 400mm/s @60,000mm/ss.
@travistucker7317 Жыл бұрын
@@ManjaroBlack what layer height does that generally happen at?
@4techs Жыл бұрын
Mega aufwändig, mega schlüssig, mega aufschlussreich! Vielen Dank für dieses Video!
@bionikleek9190 Жыл бұрын
For the strength test on the fast speeds, you could increase the radius so that it has time to get up to speed. Then you could use your lathe to get the profile correct, while cutting out the acceleration/ deceleration zones
@TylrVncnt11 ай бұрын
Increase the radius of what? Sorry if a dumb question
@MrBaskins2010 Жыл бұрын
bambu should give the option to bulk purchase parts like costco. the key to printing fast is lower cooling and flow. high flow 0.8mm clones on all three of my machines. love that transition into the sponsor message.
@DavidMulligan Жыл бұрын
This video made me wonder if we are seeing the limits of heat transfer or heat availability. Right now the hot end heater is controlled reactively using a thermistor and a PID control loop. What if the hot end heater control loop also used the current or upcoming flow rate to proactively add more heat to prevent the temperature from falling in the first place?
@reasonablebeing5392 Жыл бұрын
Great video as usual!! My existing printers are dialed in and working well. I decided to sit back and watch (and save up my money) as this next generation of printers like Bambu are perfected. Then I will jump in and enjoy the benefits.
@outofdarts Жыл бұрын
I always appreciate your dedication and content, along with your extensive testing. Great video as usual!
@MandicReally Жыл бұрын
Excellent video Stefan. I really think Bambu has hung their hat a little too heavily on "Speed" and they need to tune in "Quality" presets. My own tuned profiles are significantly slower but more reliably produce better looking & stronger parts (anecdotally). My X-1 gets a lot of use with these profiles and I'm much happier for my needs.
@akirasposion Жыл бұрын
Hi there. Can you share your updated profile settings for different material PLA,TPU,PETG ,etc? It would help a lot of us that are getting into 3d printing with this Machine. Thank you.
@Ongo-gablogian Жыл бұрын
Are those profile published anywhere per chance? If not it would be really appreciated on the discord!
@cenciende9401 Жыл бұрын
The quality out of the box was better than any of the previous 5 printers I've owned and 3x as fast.
@akirasposion Жыл бұрын
@Broski Snowski I know about Orca,but sometimes getting the profile from somebody who lives and breaths 3d printing is a better base to start from.
@VojaFMX Жыл бұрын
Stefan, I always enjoy your videos and the dedication you put into making them. Here is an Idea for a video. Testing linear systems, for instance difference in drag between genuine Hiwin rails vs Aliexpress ones, difference between smooth rods and linear rails, difference between carbon fiber rods vs smooth ss rods vs linear rails. Also maybe how big of a difference does lubrication of choice affect smoothness of gliding. and in the end which solution is the best regarding weight to least amount of drag during sliding.
@matthewmathis62 Жыл бұрын
I wonder what that stabilization systems are like in the Bambu Labs printers, and other printers. I think that you could use centrifugal force to change the direction of the movement/inertia in the Printer Head to keep it from shaking. Kind of like how it's easier to move your hand quickly in circles or ovals without moving your body, than it is to move your hand quickly left to right. Great video, Stefan! I hope Bambu Labs listens and learns from your experiments and findings.
@DoubsGaming Жыл бұрын
CNC Kitchen, can you do a vid on price to performance with filament? like what is the cheapest filament that still prints decently or what is the best filament for high accuracy. I'm still pretty new to 3D printing and there is a lot of brands out there and I have no idea what I should buy.
@Blimm_EL Жыл бұрын
Again and again, this is a really interesting subject ! Thank you for all the work
@christophstrasser4190 Жыл бұрын
Nice video, thank you 😊 why do you want to avoid drastically increasing temperature? I have been doing this for years with fat nozzles without changing to volcano. Works for this printer as well. I go 20-40 °C above max recommendation for nozzle temp. Printing 20-30 mm³/s for PLA, ABS, ASA, PETG, PCTG with hardened 0.4 mm nozzle . Perfect strength, shiny as always 😊
@alejandroperez5368 Жыл бұрын
That works when printing at equal speeds for all the print features. If you have to slow down, you will run into issues.
@christophstrasser4190 Жыл бұрын
@@alejandroperez5368 what issues? I never had any. You just need to adjust cooling accordingly.
@ericusmaximus256 Жыл бұрын
@Stephan- have you ever taken a look at temperature accuracy on your X1C? I have spent well over a month going back and forth with Bambu on this, after finding that the hotend thermistor/electronics report back a temperature about ~20C higher than reality, resulting it a "real" hotend temp of only ~250C when you ask for 270C, etc etc. This means the default 220C profiles for PLA are trying to push it out at only about 200C. It's not just a hunch- I've tested with multiple replacement thermistors, different (official) hotends, settings, countless test prints and meandering flow loops and more, and using both a thermal camera (admittedly not ideal for shiny objects, but calibrated using a Mosquito magnum :) and ALSO with K-type thermocouples on different parts of the hotend body (even in the same hole as the bambu thermistor and with either their thermal grease or even with boron nitride paste.) Heck, they even sent me all new electronics for the TC board (the interface board on the toolhead that everything plugs into) and I still see the same thing. I don't know if it's just me seeing this, but I hadn't really seen much discussion in this specific area, and had been meaning to reach out to you for a while now. So, if you set your printer to say, 230C, and sticking a cheap K-Type thermocouple coated with some thermal grease onto the hotend gives you a 230 +-1C reading, then you only have to worry about the "well known" hotend performance limitations that you described very well in this video. But if not, then you may find yourself having to do the constant mental math I've been having to do for the past month or so... By the way, Bambu has only kind-of-sort-of acknowledged my findings (after sending them multiple videos, test reports, troubleshooting sessions, etc) but I'm still missing the big "ahha" from them on this. They still seem to give off vibes that they think I'm just a crazy guy nitpicking things :)
@andrewalexander7363 Жыл бұрын
I've felt, with no scientific testing that I was missing something about the temperatures on these machines. If you are right it would make sense to me based on my experiences. I never see stringing and it's like I'm printing at lower temps than I should be. I'm gonna crank the temps up and see what happens.
@GB-uy1tq Жыл бұрын
Other tests have shown that the same filament from the same company, but a different colour, made a significant difference in tensile strength. There seems to be chemical bond differences between the colour filler materials.
@GB-uy1tq Жыл бұрын
Stronger prints are more durable and therefore last longer. The science on bond structures(cross polymerization) might be boring to most people, but if chemical companies can improve the flow rates and mechanical properties of these filaments, more people will discover how usefull 3d printers have become.
@DEtchells Жыл бұрын
About avoiding crazy acceleration rates: all you care about here is relative performance, so you don’t have to be constrained to your standard coupon geometry. You could make layer-adhesion coupons with much larger diameters in the critical region, which would give proportionately lower accelerations, or conversely higher speeds for the same acceleration. To keep the forces in the range your universal test machine can handle, you could make the structures hollow. Either start large, using a different holders on the machine, or use the same clamping diameter, but expand larger and solid right above/below the clamps, then go hollow and neck down. (It’d be easier to explain if I could draw it here, but I think you’ll get the idea easily enough. When you start making the hollow part, widen the internal opening slowly (similar shape to the exterior of your current coupons) so it won’t need any internal supports.) There are obvious limits, so I’m not sure you’ll be able to go to a large enough diameter to make a difference (the total cross-sectional area of the neck in your current coupons doesn’t give you a lot to work with), but it should help some. - And given that your machine can handle tensile testing in the in-layer direction, it might be strong enough to handle a much larger cross-layer cross-section. (Again, for this test you only care about relative numbers, so don’t need to worry about comparability to your standard tests.)
@ricfair7549 Жыл бұрын
For strength tests, I'd be interested to see what results you'd get if you used higher extrusion temperature for your high print speed tests! And then higher enclosed ambient temperature on top of that!
@Entropic0 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I am pretty sure you can solve these kinds of issues with a higher wattage heater cartridge & turning the temperature up which decreases the time needed to melt the plastic. A copper heat-block also helps because it both increases your heat throughput and reduces the lag between the heating cartridge and the hot-end. I print at about 23 mm3/sec and don't have any issues with an e3d v6. It's like $20 in upgrades.
@se77ra57 Жыл бұрын
ive been waiting for this video after seeing all the speed benchys, really interestign result and great production as always. might be worth trying out a thin "wall" like sample or a vase mode based one in an attempt to reach the higher speeds
@ameliabuns4058 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video :). always get a bit annoyed when people only talk about how fast they can run their steppers! It's fun to do that but practically matters for me personally
@benjaminshields9421 Жыл бұрын
Take into account every possibility for practicality. Fast and light prints are amazing to test fit something you've designed before moving on to a full strength design
@n0vaph0enix Жыл бұрын
Wonderfully detailed as usual! Great work Stephan.
@zondaghdutoit Жыл бұрын
wider nozzle sizes allow more material to lay on each other at a heated temperature for a longer time, making it stronger. They make the . This is why even with ultra high flow nozzles, the layers need time to cool down and not too fast, otherwise the part will collapse on itself. Have a look at the approach of filament innovations in the US. The make 2.5mm nozzles with very long heat blocks on they typhoon extruder and still produce very strong parts.
@TheKnightArgent Жыл бұрын
I LOVE my P1P, but I have had some problems with strength. Thank you so much for making this video, Stefan!
@J_Madison Жыл бұрын
Same with my X1 Carbon. Certain prints always turn out really weak.. now I know why.
@muray82 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see your final profiles
@lukasfuessel1935 Жыл бұрын
For the adhesion test i you could do single or multi-walled cylinders and print in vase mode. Since you have a cylinder layer adhesion might still be the weakest link. might be worth a try. The bigger the circle the less the acceleration limit.
@nicholaswillcox Жыл бұрын
Incredibly eye opening. Thank you for doing this.
@marcfruchtman9473 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to get a high speed nozzle, but my 3d printer uses m8 threads, which apparently is not standard... I can't even find a source that sells them other than resellers of the original OEM. This was a really great video explaining so many facets related to high speeds. Thank you.
@someguy2741 Жыл бұрын
Wouldnt this be easily dealt with by using the volumetric limit setting in the slicer?
@rauchfamily4 Жыл бұрын
Excellent as always. I enjoy all of your content Stefan! Bravo!
@macvideoworld Жыл бұрын
I almost purchased 2 bambus today, one P1P and one X1C. After watching your informative video, I now decided to cancel both orders and continue using my custom built machines which Ive been using for the past 3 years with great success. (after putting several hours and customizations of course). I thought I was missing out but not anymore. Thanks for another informative video and it makes total sense too. Keep up the good work!
@Stoabie14 Жыл бұрын
A good way to avoid the acceleration issue in the test coupons would be to use perimeters for the primary fill of the part, as the concentric pathing will avoid the harder acceleration points based on the linear infill, and will be more consistent as it avoids the inevitable changes in extrusion speed required to keep consistent bead width when doing harsh direction changes.
@802Garage Жыл бұрын
Have you ever printed your strenght coupons as all walls or with concentric infill? Could be interesting.
@RideShagbark Жыл бұрын
It seems like Bambu Labs is constantly improving it's printers. Hope they see this and add this to a future revision.
@Nerlin Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. They should change to a high flow nozzle as the default.
@tHaH4x0r Жыл бұрын
@@Nerlin They would be stupid to not develop and offer drop in replacement highflow units. Most people who have bambulab printers dont want to muck about with aftermarket stuff. Just being able to buy the solution directly would be very advantageous.
@andreaspoulsen8017 Жыл бұрын
I hope they do as default stock.
@Nerlin Жыл бұрын
@@tHaH4x0r I agree. I have 2 X1Cs
@coltenmeredith8899 Жыл бұрын
Build a VZ-Bot. The Bambu Labs X1C is a toy compared to it
@someguy2741 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if you can increase the fan speed as print speed increases. If the plastic leaves the nozzle at the same temp then the only variable is the amount of time the line of plastic is exposed to cooling fan.
@Schnabulation11 ай бұрын
Looking forward on you testing the genuine E3D obXidian nozzle…
@kwm6719 Жыл бұрын
For better high flow nozzle tests. Instead of printing the hour glass shape you could print cylinders of the major diameter, then machine them down to the hour glass shape. Add what's called a live center recess on one end and make them slightly longer so they can be chucked up in a lathe and supported on the opposite end. They do make desktop CNC lathes that can handle this easily. I am a career CNC machinist, if you want any help with programming and setting it up I would be happy to help. But, I have a feeling you could figure it out on your own. good luck and keep up the great content.
@rcbronco78307 ай бұрын
Hi. Could you make a video about the strength of filaments of fast vs slow 3d printers. Example ,bambu vs ender 3.
@astupidmoose4real Жыл бұрын
I've been slowing down print speeds on anything "decorative" to 50mm/s on only the external layers for my bambu x1c. While it definitely slows down prints (but still faster then most printers), it makes parts way nicer and eliminates any of the color changes.
@Almajtek3 ай бұрын
Hey, thanks for your amazing scientific, unbiased videos, I love your work.
@RocktCityTim Жыл бұрын
As always, Stefan, thanks for an excellent deep dive!
@CrazexSteve9 ай бұрын
Thank you again my 3d printing brother! 🎉
@Highspeedfutzi Жыл бұрын
10:55 you could print long, flat samples and cut them up.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I though about this recently. Maybe then just laser cut samples.
@emberprototypes Жыл бұрын
Such a great video! And thanks for linking to our blog post. Pretty cool to see that your empirical tests line up with what my thoughts were after reading those papers 😅
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
My pleasure!
@swimking1 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. I would like to see if the strength tests change if you print each coupon separately to see if there is a difference when the layers do not have time to fully cool down.
@AdventurePrinting Жыл бұрын
Congrats for all the job!
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Thanks.
@blaskotron Жыл бұрын
I just increase the temps 10c to keep the volume high, 20+. 230 pla, 270 abs. Using Bambu 0.6 nozzle.
@WinstonMakes Жыл бұрын
I'd be curious to see if the material itself is affected strength wise, not just layer strength, by the rapid heating, extrusion, and cooling. A flat tensile test sample (hourglass shaped) should be easy to make without the need to worry about acceleration as much.
@MapleGlassPrinting Жыл бұрын
Awesome video Stefan! Sending love from Australia 🧡
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Thanks guys!
@serkanbudur Жыл бұрын
Great video Stefan, thanks for addressing this!
@vogtm Жыл бұрын
I started using my new X1C two weeks ago and I can 100% agree in terms of "speed is not everything". I'm especially struggling with printing TPU (Colorfabb Varioshore) and i already had to de-assembly the hotend and the extruder to remove clogged filament. I didn't had this kind of issues e.g. on my prusa mini. Reducing the max. volumetric speed has solved the problems. I think this long melting zone is not good for TPU.
@Adisken Жыл бұрын
11:00 maybe use concentric infill? I guess if the nozzle would go in a circles the disacceleration would be this big.
@CNCKitchen Жыл бұрын
Thought about this and might try it next time, yet it's unfortunately not doing a nice spiral.
@jayphone1 Жыл бұрын
Regarding reaching the printspeeds for the test samples: what about printing standing plates and milling out dog bones?