Lengthy read but needing a little bit of assistance.
TLDR - Overture PETG, dried, plate cleaned, semi-inconsistent issue?
Long version - Dried some PETG for over 5-6 hours at 60c in my AMS2 Pro and opted to print some desiccant boxes for it.
I had one small area where there was a slight adhesion issue near the center of the build plate for the initial layer. I'm very particular about keeping the plate clean but, I'll always go back to the basics so I pulled it and washed it with Dawn dish soap. Let it dry thoroughly and placed it back along with wiping it down with Isopropyl alcohol (my standard go to).
Well running the print again caused the same issue but in a different spot, close to center but towards the rear and right.
Pulled the print settings card that Overture provides and I compared the bed and nozzle temps that were running in my prints. Learned yesterday that bed temps can be altered in the Filament settings during the Prepare portion of the slicer.
I upped the bed temp for the initial layer to 85c, and left it at the 70c for all remaining layers (same temps I had run for the above prints). Left the nozzle temps at 245c as the chart calls for 230-250c.
Different results this time as the first layer stuck on perfect all over the build plate, and an issue occurred on two parts on different areas of the build plate. More like, filament didn't stick to the second layer or so (pictures below).
Here are 3 of the parts (from the same program) to show good adhesion on the bottom, and clean layering on top.
And the bottom of the ones with issues; you'll see they're intact and adhered to the plate well.
But the issues arose after the that for these two.
I concluded that the issue may be that the bed temps should remain 85c both for the initial layer as well as the rest of the program.
We're about 1 hour in and after checking the current print job, I have slightly different results with some items looking perfect and others having an issue for several layers along one wall. And a bit of filament astray on another piece.
Keeping in mind, bed temps are a consistent 85c and nozzle temps are 245c.
Being new to 3D printing, I'm unsure how to visually "read" these results.
Also, the inside of those walls (last picture) look as if the filament was just strung along and not actually adding any strength?