Cliff K

Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK

by
CK 3D Prints
Follow
Follow
Remix Model
CK 3D Prints
CK 3D Prints
|
Image 1 of 3
Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK 3d model
CK 3D Prints
CK 3D Prints
|
Image 1 of 3
Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK 3d model
2D
3D
Makes
Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK 3d model
Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK 3d model
Flow Rate Tool for Flexi Joints by CK 3d model

Print our latest tool designed to calibrate different filaments to work with lower tolerance, poseable Flexi models. This tool should work with any filament and printer combination. While it is designed specifically for our models it is made to be as accurate as possible for general printing.

If your Flexi models are fusing together, feel too loose, or it seems like small gaps are being fused, you likely need to adjust your Flow Rate for your filament. 

Every filament prints differently, so we highly recommend doing tests before printing any larger objects or time consuming multi-color prints.

This number is usually set between 0.95-1.00 (0.80-1.15 at most). 

Print this small tester before your first adjustment and reprint for every adjustment after. After your first test print, follow the guide below and make adjustments of plus or minus 0.05-0.10 depending on if it’s too tight or too loose. Afterwards, you can fine-tune with increments of +/- 0.01 if you feel it’s needed. 

If the #1 slider is fused while #2 & #3 move freely (or after easily breaking them free) and the test joint bends, your settings should be about perfect. 

While Flow Calibration is the most common reason for fused joints, things like temperature, scale, design, etc., can also cause a print to fuse. Be sure to check your layers in the slicer for any printing paths that fuse joints due to a small scale.

There are more accurate Flow Rate tools that can be found online, but they require calipers and a bit of math. We like this one as an alternative: 3dprintbeginner.com/flow-rate-calibration

Settings:

We recommend using the same settings you would use for you models.

If you are just testing in general, 0.2 mm layers with 3 walls would be a great starting point.


13 Likes21 DownloadsOctober 16, 2024


13 Likes21 DownloadsOctober 16, 2024