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Have you calibrated your first layer and flow rate? Your first layer might be thicker than it should be or you've got too much material on the top surface. Print one layer and measure the thickness. Also take a look to your top surfaces if there's excess material. If so, you can tune down your total flow or just top layer flow. |
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I cannot figure out how to calibrate or adjust my settings to get my prints to come out dimensionally correct along the Z axis. I'm hoping someone can point me to a SuperSlicer setting that can help me solve this. Here is an export of my slicer settings: Z axis too high config.txt. Here are additional details about my currents setup:
Printer
Artillery Sidewinder X2
I've flashed an updated firmware to Marlin 2.1
I'm using 0.2mm layer height currently. I've tried with 0.3mm and gotten similar results.
Limited hardware mods (and I don't imagine they'd be a cause, but listing for completeness):
-Z-Axis Stabiliser Brackets
-Bi-metal heat break
-0.6mm nozzle
Material
eSun PLA+
Calibration Steps Taken
I found and like Michael's Teaching Tech calibration pages and videos and have done my best to follow and complete most of them. These seem like the most relevant ones he touches on:
Still not getting the results, I happened upon SuperSlicer's own calibration menu and steps. Some of them were repeats of Michael's but I went through them anyways. All good until I get to the last check, the dimensional cubes. This is where I am seeing the consistent +0.3mm variation (when measuring 20 and 30mm cubes that I print). Just to be clear the X and Y axis/sides are measuring at the expected values (or within a smaller margin of error that I'm ok with). The explanation from the calibration menu states:
The problem is the suggested fix described only addresses X and Y compensation. There doesn't seem to be one for Z.
Other Searching
Most references I've been able to find only speak to prints coming out too short. From the Slic3r Manual (which I understand to be the underpinnings of SuperSlicer):
If the inverse is true, then my nozzle is too high...? This can't be. I've leveled my bed and zeroed my Z settings with a feeler gauge. I can't go any lower without going into my bed--certainly not .3mm lower.
I imagine the solution is going to be something stupidly simple, but I just cannot figure it out; my Google-fu is failing me on this one.
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