julesvapes
Postman
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2015
- Messages
- 57
Dammit! I may be stubborn but you have almost talked me out of a delta!It may start looking less attractive after weeks of trouble shooting and frustration
The early Deltas were better then some of the early sloppy cartesian 3D printer at curves and reduced shadowing but now we are at a point that cartesian printer sparse Deltas in all but speed (that's why you see significantly more cartesian style printers being made and sold, despite Deltas being cheaper to make).
Don't get me wrong there are some excellent and when you really know what you are doing you can build a very good printer for a low cost......just hard to recorded them as a first printer, rather then a second printer custom built for speed.
Also I have issues with automatic bed levelling.......I kind of think its better for people to learn to do it themselves rather then spend the same amount of time trying to get auto bed levelling to actually work.
Less weight on the X axis is a good thing for speed, but ghosting/ripple is a non issues if you get the slop out of the build by having the right tension on your belts and good bearings.
Where as Bowden extruder's have the disadvantage of introducing more play in the filament resulting in fluctuating values needed for optimal retraction and extrusion setting (something that can not be done on the fly, so you will never be able to have the optimal settings)
Then you have the fact that it reduces the types of filament you can actually print with over a direct system.
So the only real advantage of a Bowden is speed.
I would rather have a slower, ugly printer that lets me print higher quality with less messing around.
Yes resolution map means the printer is less accurate the more you move away from the centre, but there is no way to compensate for this with software as each step a stepper-motor makes is a fixed mechanical value that can be changed with software.
No problem, that's what the tread is for
what would you recommend for a cartesian ? I would really prefer a kit, so if something does go wrong or i decide on upgrades later on I should at least have an idea of how to fix/upgrade it