I have a Creality Ender 3V2 that I've been learning the ins and outs of printing on, and in the last few days, it has developed a problem I've never seen before.
No filament sticks to the bed.
In the last few days, I went to make a little tool to hold sand paper onto a crankshaft I'm making. Think of a popsicle stick with a thicker handle at the back. The stick portion is thin, 1/8", and the back handle is 1/2" thick. The whole thing is 3/8" wide. I came up with a design and printed a prototype with a minor issue. One corner of the first layer didn't stick to the bed well, and I had not used a glue stick. Later in the print, the thin end of the stick lifted into the air and in a test to see if I could put a spot of glue there and push it down, the whole thing came off the table. I aborted the print but it's still usable.
In an effort to get another couple of sticks for different grade sandpapers, I used a glue stick, and that always sticks so well it's hard to get things off. In the midst, I tried to print some squares, used to test the bed flatness and they would just stick erratically.
Since that first issue, I've cleaned the bed three or four times and nothing gets the filament out of the extruder to stick to the bed without a glue stick. I've used plain water, soapy water, denatured alcohol and isopropyl alcohol. Just in terms of the pure tendency to stick to the bed, it has gotten worse every time I've cleaned it. I've tried printing designs that I know have worked effortlessly before and every attempt fails.
I've used two different colors of eSUN PLA+
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01EKEMIIS/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1and a little piece of plain PLA that came with the printer as a sample to get you started. I have a waterproof dry box to store filaments in that aren't being used, and they're all sealed in there between uses. The PLA+ says on the label that heating the bed isn't necessary, but I've experimented with that, and I have things around here I printed without the bed being heated. I've adjusted the extruder temperature from plain PLA up to the somewhat higher temperature the PLA+ wants (210 to 220C) but I've tried it at 190 and 200, too.
Nothing seems to be helping and I'm at a loss for what to do next. I'd appreciate any ideas.
Bob
No filament sticks to the bed.
In the last few days, I went to make a little tool to hold sand paper onto a crankshaft I'm making. Think of a popsicle stick with a thicker handle at the back. The stick portion is thin, 1/8", and the back handle is 1/2" thick. The whole thing is 3/8" wide. I came up with a design and printed a prototype with a minor issue. One corner of the first layer didn't stick to the bed well, and I had not used a glue stick. Later in the print, the thin end of the stick lifted into the air and in a test to see if I could put a spot of glue there and push it down, the whole thing came off the table. I aborted the print but it's still usable.
In an effort to get another couple of sticks for different grade sandpapers, I used a glue stick, and that always sticks so well it's hard to get things off. In the midst, I tried to print some squares, used to test the bed flatness and they would just stick erratically.
Since that first issue, I've cleaned the bed three or four times and nothing gets the filament out of the extruder to stick to the bed without a glue stick. I've used plain water, soapy water, denatured alcohol and isopropyl alcohol. Just in terms of the pure tendency to stick to the bed, it has gotten worse every time I've cleaned it. I've tried printing designs that I know have worked effortlessly before and every attempt fails.
I've used two different colors of eSUN PLA+
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01EKEMIIS/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1and a little piece of plain PLA that came with the printer as a sample to get you started. I have a waterproof dry box to store filaments in that aren't being used, and they're all sealed in there between uses. The PLA+ says on the label that heating the bed isn't necessary, but I've experimented with that, and I have things around here I printed without the bed being heated. I've adjusted the extruder temperature from plain PLA up to the somewhat higher temperature the PLA+ wants (210 to 220C) but I've tried it at 190 and 200, too.
Nothing seems to be helping and I'm at a loss for what to do next. I'd appreciate any ideas.
Bob