5

I have printed a couple weeks perfectly fine with my Ender 3. Two weeks ago I changed the firmware but the settings were all fine and resulted in good prints.

Now, suddenly during a print the extruder motor started to under-extrude.

I thought "hey, could be the file" and used a test file that printed well two weeks ago: Under-extrusion, barely a line.

I looked at the extruder, no filament grinding, no clicking from lost steps or moving against pressure. The Bowden tube is firmly seated though.

I measured what is coming out: instead of 50 mm I ordered to push into the hotend got 28.7 mm. So I went and looked at the steps/mm, which is 93, exactly what it is also on the TronXY X1, which uses pretty much the same extruder setup but for a different style, same sized gear.

I cleaned out the nozzle nevertheless, but that didn't change the results.

What might be wrong and how can I fix it?!

Edit:

  • Touching the filament while I was printing a freshly sliced test, I realized it DID lose steps, just the filament did slip back (almost) quietly. Pressing a finger on the filament made me able to feel the shiver in it.
  • Inspecting what was printed showed, that the nozzle had migrated against the print platform a little over the weeks.
Greenonline
  • 6,748
  • 8
  • 40
  • 68
Trish
  • 22,760
  • 13
  • 53
  • 106

2 Answers2

3

A close inspection of what happened when printing the first layer resulted in this:

  • The missing steps on the new print came from the nozzle scraping too close to the print surface, which lead to no first layer
  • Readjusting the Z-axis end stop, which had moved down, resulted in no more lost steps, but the print not sticking for the first test.
  • Releveling the bed and making sure the bar was parallel to the bed resulted in a perfect first layer.

  • Lost steps and under-extrusion could not be replicated after 48 hours of rest for the printer.

I have no idea why the print had failed due to under-extrusion during the print, but apparently, my immediate tests were flawed enough to not detect the first layer height resulting in getting almost no extrusion. This I mistook for massive under-extrusion, making me believe something else was at fault.

Greenonline
  • 6,748
  • 8
  • 40
  • 68
Trish
  • 22,760
  • 13
  • 53
  • 106
0

Sounds similar to something I experienced with my Y-axis. The grub screw on the toothed wheel had come a little loose, and I was experiencing a reasonably consistent degree of slip.

In the extruder particularly, these locking screws might not be too obvious to check.

Sean Houlihane
  • 3,852
  • 2
  • 22
  • 39