LeonardY
Well-known member
I vote for this!Or cranky printer gnomes
I vote for this!Or cranky printer gnomes
These Honeybadger build plates are a must in my opinion. Glue stick is lame, the Honeybadger being PEI doesn't require glue stick. It's dual sided, so I run PETG on the textured side and PLA on the smooth side. If you print PETG on the smooth side, I would use Windex or hairspray to keep it from sticking too hard. Other than that, I've not done anything besides clean the carbon rods and lube the leadscrews once in the 560 hours of print time so far. I do highly recommend the Hydra AMS mod if you plan on sourcing filament from manufacturers outside of Bambu Lab.Probably going to order a X1 carbon for our HS STEM lab soon. Any "must-have" spares or accessories to have on hand? Plan on running this hard as a workhorse.

Any particular reason for the Honeybadger over Bambu's Textured PEI plate? Thinking I could put it inside one order from Bambu and be simpler. Most of what we are running is PLA, some (small amount) ABS and maybe getting into more "exotic" ones as we move forward. Plan on running other filament that isn't Bambu, so thanks for the tip on the Hydra mod. The filament rolls I have been using do have black plastic for the roll, so it seemed like they should be fine.These Honeybadger build plates are a must in my opinion. Glue stick is lame, the Honeybadger being PEI doesn't require glue stick. It's dual sided, so I run PETG on the textured side and PLA on the smooth side. If you print PETG on the smooth side, I would use Windex or hairspray to keep it from sticking too hard. Other than that, I've not done anything besides clean the carbon rods and lube the leadscrews once in the 560 hours of print time so far. I do highly recommend the Hydra AMS mod if you plan on sourcing filament from manufacturers outside of Bambu Lab.
I don't like or recommend using a textured build plate for PLA, it just doesn't adhere well enough to be reliable in my experience. That's why it's great for PETG, which tends to stick too aggressively to a smooth sheet. I have the Bambu textured sheet and have used it for PETG, and it's just fine of course. The Honeybadger is more convenient because you can print PLA on the smooth side without glue stick (glue stick is atleast recommended if not required on the Bambu Cool Plate that comes with the machine) and when I'm printing PETG I can just flip the build plate over to the textured side.Any particular reason for the Honeybadger over Bambu's Textured PEI plate? Thinking I could put it inside one order from Bambu and be simpler. Most of what we are running is PLA, some (small amount) ABS and maybe getting into more "exotic" ones as we move forward. Plan on running other filament that isn't Bambu, so thanks for the tip on the Hydra mod. The filament rolls I have been using do have black plastic for the roll, so it seemed like they should be fine.
Right now we have a couple of Raise 3D that are working well enough, just think the print speed may make this the gamechanger for us.
Sure. So my understanding is that Bambu Lab created the Cool Plate in order to reduce chamber temperatures for printing PLA since it's an enclosed machine. I'm not exactly sure what the actual material of the Cool Plate is, but it's a consumable sticker that every so often you have to peel off of the spring steel build sheet and replace. It allows you to only heat the bed to 35-45C and thus reduce chamber temperatures, but to promote both adhesion and part removal glue stick is necessary.Gotcha. Yes, was not going planning on using the textured for the PLA. Wonder what the Honeybadger did different for the smooth side, that you don't feel the need for any gluestick/hairspray/etc, compared to the Bambu.
Not questioning your results, just wondering out loud.
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That makes these things look even better.
I like stupid cheap! I can easily forget the cost of the tool I bought to do it with.





I printed two copies of this part. Each was printed at 180° because I wanted to see how the same dimensions in CAD will vary based on whether they were formed against support material. There were certainly differences.
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It's actually a combination of two different materials that, when combined into one, give properties similar to ABS. The materials are in liquid form and get sprayed in droplets similar to an inkjet paper printer. Then, each layer is cured with UV light. This give the advantage of being very smooth on non-supported surfaces. This is not only aesthetically pleasing but provides a good surface for sliding parts.New to 3D printing Is this a flavor of Nylon?
Thanks.
BobL.
Is Cura set up for your exact printer? And have you set 0,0,0?Hey everyone,
I personally have a Flashforge Adventure 3, and it works great for my small stuff at home. No issues, incredibly easy slicer and setup.
I am a highschool teacher (physics), and the classroom next to mine is the computer graphic arts lab. The old teacher in that room bought an Ultimaker 2+ quite a few years ago. Since she left 3 or so years ago, the printer has been sitting. The new teacher has never used it, so I figured I'd bring it to my room so I can make things with the kids.
Anyways, the printer has an SD card in it's slot with some files that come stock from Ultimaker, and some that are apparently uploaded by students from years past. Those files print great. Zero problems.
Fast forward to my files. I'm making a desktop catapult (that I've drawn to compete with my students' popsicle stick catapults they're currently making), and I cannot get a single thing to print properly. There are two or three big issues. One, the printer head isn't automatically heating up prior to printing - I have to manually preheat it. Two, the prints start in random locations. I can jog the head to the center of the bed and it'll print from there, but it won't print in the center if I place the part in the center on the slicer (Cura). Three, and this is the biggest issue, it won't print on the print bed. There is a 1-2" gap between the nozzle and bed. I have to pause the printer, jog the bed up, and then print.
I'm totally at a loss here. I've never messed with G code, and would hope I don't have to manually modify the code each time I do a print. My Flashforge is very much push the button and walk away. Any thoughts?
Is Cura set up for your exact printer? And have you set 0,0,0?

You set that on your printer. In the firmware. It's got some little screen to do that, doesn't it?
You set that on your printer. In the firmware. It's got some little screen to do that, doesn't it?
Is it possible you have some gcode scripts in Cura that are loading inappropriately? I forget what is called, but you can prepend gcode in a screen in Cura, and it loads every time. It can really eff things up.I didn't see one and I believe I went through all of the settings. All I saw was calibrating the level of the bed.
I found a start and end code someone else used and it worked pretty well. I just need to figure out how to keep the bed warm while it prints. It preheats fine but doesn't stay hot while printing. Shows it's supposed to under the material preset, so not sure why it's happening. Works fine for the preloaded SD parts though.
Wanted to help stay organize when removing lug nuts. So made this for the maxjax. Fits perfect, now all the lug nuts have a home on each arm.
Please tell me you saved the file as "nutsack".Wanted to help stay organize when removing lug nuts. So made this for the maxjax. Fits perfect, now all the lug nuts have a home on each arm.
Wanted to help stay organize when removing lug nuts. So made this for the maxjax. Fits perfect, now all the lug nuts have a home on each arm.
New, fancy hot end? I see you've got one of those cored nozzles.
New, fancy hot end? I see you've got one of those cored nozzles.
aliexpress special for 15 bucks.
we shall see if it helps PETG flow better.
I'm running the .6 CHT tri flow black magic nozzle lol....but it works. Bumped the temps up a bit as well and can run almost 25 or 30% more filament then with a standard nozzle. Haven't tried any of the generics, but the originals work
I should call her...