After a couple of hours of printing, I went downstairs to see this:
The glass slipped. I think it slipped because the head hit the object during a move, and I think the reason that happened is because the object warped, and that was because the glass is so thick that 110* on the bottom only results in 95 on the top in the middle and less at the edges, according to the IR thermometer.
To combat this I'm setting the bed temperature at 120 and I may go to 130.
I've also decided to video record long prints that I'm not personally watching so that I can try to determine the actual cause of unexpected axis slips rather than guessing and tweaking stuff at random.
Also I'm clipping the glass to the board underneath:
no subject
Date: 2011-09-25 01:18 am (UTC)If this works, it may be wise to remove the parts that let you remove the clips.
(Now can someone get this safety officer I'm channeling out of my head)
no subject
Date: 2011-09-25 01:29 am (UTC)Binder clips are actually standard equipment for these printers, they're what has been used to hold down print beds since day one.
The assumption is that anyone who uses one of these is an adult.
Besides, the surface is only about 110*C, and the binder clips are thin metal open to the air, they're probably more like about 60*C. Not a burn hazard unless you hold your skin to them.
Honestly, I touch the print surface lightly and quickly to flick off stray bits of plastic during printing, and the IR thermometer reads it at 110*C at times, and it doesn't burn. I just don't touch it for long.
no subject
Date: 2011-09-25 01:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-25 03:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-25 04:40 pm (UTC)