indeed I am
indeed I am
Did printing with PETG ever work with your printer?
You could create two gcode files for the same model, one for PLA and one for PETG and see if something stands out in their difference.
I got a farfetched theory … Maybe your printer is underpowered. Printing PETG requieres a higher temperature and thus more power. This is absolute guesswork, but you could try to disconnect your printer from the power outlet and tighten the screws for the power connections going from the power supply unit and going into your printers main board
Corgi into German Shepherd into Wolf
Unsure what exactly you want to do, but this might be of help https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Partitioning/Home/Moving
For me it was the OS. We agreed, when I started my job, that I would use Windows but that I would eventually switch to Linux, which I did a few months in. If they wouldn’t allow it, although agreed upon, I would have left - which I did anyways, but for totally different reasons
Would love to see when you print it though
Gives me the idea of adding wings
Oh, and I thought you were pulling my leg. Well, thank you ^^
Ahh, don’t put salt in my wounds ;) I only had a few meters left and chose the wrong settings
If you are into 3D printing you could create filament out of it … https://hackaday.com/2020/12/16/3d-printing-with-vhs-tape-filament/
I followed https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3PbGFMFh4pU but there are some flaws I had to consider (i.e. they create the collision mesh during runtime, which has an performance impact), but it was a good starting point
Does installing python3-libevdev
help?
Probably not what you are looking for: I recently had to cut a part in two, because it wouldn’t fit the bed. PrusaSlicer has a nice feature where you can add connectors to the cut. I then used a 2-component putty to glue them together and sanded the overflow afterwards.
TIL :)