- Joined
- Dec 18, 2019
- Messages
- 7,495
Received a thermistor yesterday. Today I replaced the one in the printer. I swear this printer has the worse service ergonomics. Good thing my wife wasn't home as I was using some blue words. I was surprised how the darn thing wanted to fight me. Disassembly was relatively easy, but wrapping the wires in their silly canvas wrap wasn't so fun, nor was reinstalling the cable clamp on the processor box. Just fought me all the way, especially with the cable clamp. Need 15 hands, light, exterior clamping via pliers, and screwing in M3 screws all at once.
The new and old thermistor differed by 10K ohms, which is only 10%. But, so far it is printing a test print. By this time, the printer would have shut down, so it's looking good. I guess I should redo the PID, and maybe the TM calibration. The temperature wanders more than it did when it was bad - but it is printing!
Umm, spoke a bit too soon. It did print, but it turned into spaghetti maybe 5 minutes after I went downstairs. (Z=~ 6mm) The good thing is it didn't overheat and over adhere to the satin sheet. I was turning the printer over on multiple sides trying to see what I was doing, and get better access, maybe messsed something up. No thermal anomolies though.
The new and old thermistor differed by 10K ohms, which is only 10%. But, so far it is printing a test print. By this time, the printer would have shut down, so it's looking good. I guess I should redo the PID, and maybe the TM calibration. The temperature wanders more than it did when it was bad - but it is printing!
Umm, spoke a bit too soon. It did print, but it turned into spaghetti maybe 5 minutes after I went downstairs. (Z=~ 6mm) The good thing is it didn't overheat and over adhere to the satin sheet. I was turning the printer over on multiple sides trying to see what I was doing, and get better access, maybe messsed something up. No thermal anomolies though.