I have an giga and it’s a bit finicky, I am hoping to troubleshoot. A Bambu it is not. I am a bit disappointed, because for bigger prints the printer is much less reliable so far than hoped. I had desired to be doing much more furniture design prototyping and projects than troubleshooting.

My primary issues are bed adhesion (even after good bed leveling), and layer adhesion. The first, leads to a quick failed print and sometimes a more catastrophic clog of the nozzle. The second, yields a bad quality print that has warping.

Right now I can sort of print PLA with a lot of brims (no brims, no joy) but my desired state is to print PETG, but the issues are proving too severe to get any success there.

I’ve done temperature towers, and am running hotter with a 0.6mm nozzle. I have textured pei print beds.

Anyone have any suggestions?

  • Rutty@sh.itjust.worksOP
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    1 day ago

    I think you might have nailed it on advice. Based on what you and others are saying it sounds like an enclosure is in order.

    I was wondering about glue? I’ve been using it on the build plate on the giga. To be honest though, I don’t even bother gluing pla or PETG prints on my smaller printers that have textured PEI build plates.
    Understandably though, it makes sense the larger build area and lack of enclosure would make adhesion more difficult.

    I noticed a bit of wobble when it was printing the arches at higher heights. I think you are again right in that speed needs to be reduced.

    • Wade@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      If you don’t want to use glue, I’ve found that a quick wipe with IPA will remove surface oils and help prints stick to the build plate

    • Postmortal_Pop@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I was thinking about it after posting and if you’re not hurting for plastic you could reduce some of the wobble by adding temporary support to the model. Cura used to have a plugin called baobab that would auto generate fat tree support all the way around a model, something like that to add extra footprint to taller models would do wonders.