Hey there, first post – hope it’s okay to put out a request for some advice. I just started 3D printing a few weeks ago (got an Ender 3 S1) and contrary to seemingly everyone else online, I’ve had no issues whatsoever with bed adhesion, rather the opposite.

Mostly to this point, I’ve been using ‘EconoFil’ PLA from filaments.ca (which was tricky to remove until I bought a better bed spatula-thing). Yesterday I got a roll of Overture ‘Eco-PLA’, which I’ve printed with a couple of times using organic supports, and both times has left a really stuck-on, almost chalky layer of filament on the bed. This isn’t so bad if I’m printing with the same filament afterward, but the Eco-PLA is ‘Midnight Black’ and I want to switch back to the Econofil for another model, which is ‘Bone White’ and I don’t want the bottom to get stained with the leftover Eco-PLA.

Has anyone had any similar issues? Any foolproof technique for removing stubborn, very thin layers?

  • dack@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Are you letting the bed cool before removing? That can help a lot.

    What type of bed do you have? If it’s a flexible one, just take it off the printer and flex it/peel it off.

  • Square Singer@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Maybe you are leveling the bed too close to the nozzle. Google some pictures of how a good first layer is supposed to look like and move the bed a little lower so that the first layer has good adhesion but isn’t forced into the bed.

  • chkno@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    As a bed scraper, I use a putty knife that I’ve sharpened on one side (chisel grind, #4).

    Before printing too-sticky materials (like TPU on my PEI bed), I put down a layer of glue stick. This is sticky enough for successful prints, but easily removed at the end of the print.