😿 the 0.6 nozzle was clogged too. I definitely cleared that clog though.
ALL of these clogs have ultimately been due to filament doing things it wasn't supposed to: breaking + ??? (with the wood impregnated), getting tied in a "knot" so it couldn't be pulled off the spool, and breaking because brittle from too wet... i think.
I've replacement nozzles & the https://noclogger.com/ tool @gooba42 recommended after watching a vid. Maybe it can save my 0.4mm.
it's time to refill my daily drug dispenser thing. Picked up the Adderall bottle and there's one pill left.
Of course, I couldn't order a refill last week like every other effing drug. Nah, I may be a drug dealer! I have to wait until < 3 days before i run out, and THEN ask for a refill.
It's REALLY not hard to write an algorithm that notices someone attempting to shift a schedule to get more drugs. But no, give the people with memory issues the responsibility of compensating for your fear.
I need someone to create a tiny robotic car with the footprint about the size of a Deck of Cards and hopefully not much taller that will act like a Roomba on my floor, but with a powerful magnet instead of suction.
I need something to find all the screws and nuts I have dropped
@Natanox@logicalmoody I honestly don’t think the problems have anything to do with a printer, although I do think that a bed slinger would be worse because I theorize it would induce more wiggle.
From my testing last time ( see the toot i linked in my reply to myself), it really does seem to just be an artifact of those two skinny sections
i should note that the angle of your inclined plane plays into the look a lot. As with the stair-step look, the more shallow the angle the farther the waves will be spread from each other.
I would suggest that you're probably going to have a lot more value from playing with the width of the sine wave than the height.
If the sine waves get much taller than this, the eye starts noticing the ridges more than the pattern.