My prints come out very well but I’m noticing on larger prints that one corner of my bed prints tighter than the opposite. What’s causing this?

Printing on an Ender 3 Pro with upgraded metal extruder, beefier bed springs and metal levelers, and upgraded hot end. Not direct drive yet and no auto bed leveling.

  • SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    Do you have any kind of ABL (BLtouch, etc?). If so what does the bed mesh look like.

    Edit: I should learn to read better. No ABL.

    It may be worth looking at leveling (tramming) your bed.

    Basically tighten each of your screws all the way and then loosen them 1 and a half full turns counter clockwise.

    Let’s start with your rear left screw. It’s the one with the bed wire retainer and so it doesn’t have as much room to adjust as the others.

    In the next steps we’re not going to loosen or tighten this one any more than what we just did. We’re going to use it as the reference/base point for the other 3.

    Home the printer and then using the controls on the LCD (or via octoprint/Klipper if you have them) bring your nozzle over the spot where the screw is. Then baby step it down to doing the paper test until you just start to feel the nozzle grab the paper.

    Once you have that lift your nozzle up 5mm and move it over the front right screw. Then lower your nozzle 5mm (you can do this in 1mm increments 5 times just to be sure it isn’t likely to crash into the bed. You can tighten the screw if you need room). Once you’re down the 5mm the nozzle will be at the same height as the reference screw.

    Do the paper test here and adjust the screw beneath it until it just grabs.

    Now do the same for the front left and rear right screws. Each time you’re using your nozzle controlled by the steppers. Which means when it’s moved up by 5 and then down by 5 you’re at the same height.

    Once you’ve done all 4 home your printer again and then repeat it. Again starting with the rear left (reference) screw.

    We’re doing this because when you tighten and loosen corners the others pivot relatively like a large patch of ice floating on water. Stepping towards one edge raises others. It’s why we’re doing them in opposing diagonal pairs.

    (Rear-left and front-right) (Front-left and rear-right)

    Once you have all 4 trammed you’ll home again and then check the center of the bed with the paper test. Hopefully it’s the same but these ender beds can curve inward or bulge out a little bit. If so there’s a few ways to fix it but let’s start with the tramming which may solve your issue.

    • QuarterSwede@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      10 months ago

      It was leveled pre-printing and with a heated bed. Could still be a level issue because I don’t have ABL but I’m not a noice to leveling.

      Print came out great regardless. Also, not my model.

          • SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            2
            ·
            edit-2
            10 months ago

            Ahh. May be physical then. I do have a longer write up I did for somebody else who was having issues who was running Klipper I can link to shortly.

            But basically it may be worth making sure everything is solid physically. E.g. extrusions are square, not overly tightened, vwheels are tight enough without being so tight that they end up having bumps and presenting weird issues like this.

            Here’s the link. Nothing more frustrating than when everything should work and just isn’t. Been there so many times myself.

            https://lemmy.world/comment/7904011

          • SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            10 months ago

            Something else to check… print a small calibration cube. Because I’m wondering if you’re getting consistent extrusion. Inconsistent extrusion along the same plane and height on the cube will be pretty obvious.