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<center>''How to test new filament on a Taz''</center> | <center>''How to test new filament on a Taz''</center> | ||
==Safety== | ==Safety== |
Revision as of 10:38, 12 April 2019
Safety
- Same as Taz 6 use
Equipment or Bill of Materials
- Lulzbot taz 6
Operation & Procedure
- Before you start to get an idea of what you need to do for finding the right print settings - read this carefully - Woern, A.L.; Byard, D.J.; Oakley, R.B.; Fiedler, M.J.; Snabes, S.L.; Pearce, J.M. Fused Particle Fabrication 3-D Printing: Recycled Materials’ Optimization and Mechanical Properties. Materials 2018, 11, 1413. doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/ma11081413
- Do a mini lit /web search to find the default settings for your base plastic as a rough guess on temp -along with your recyclebot experience.
- Ensure that your filament is thin enough to fit into the filament hole on the Taz.
- Take out the old filament and put your filament in the hole. Look for a minimum temperature that it will extrude out manually by adjusting the temperature on Lulzbot with the dial and pushing it with your hand through hot end. At the "right" temp - you will see the plastic come out of the nozzle - the exact width of the nozzle hole (e.g. no thin, weird curling, etc.)
- For speed start with some of the default settings under the advanced menu in Lulzbot Cura for the same/similar base polymer.
- Make the following prints using the STLs in this project (https://osf.io/f4rh9/ ):
- line/liness to get right T and speed
- vase - test wall thickness with calipers
- cube - test x, y, z with calipers
- 5X ASTM D638 Type 4 standard tensile bars.