EDIT: solution is in the comments. TL;Dr retractions ON and INCREASE speed. Both opposite to common knowledge.

I can’t print flexible TPU properly. It’s either foamy, inconsistent extrusion or jam city, nothing else. I wasn’t able to complete a single print properly in a week and probably 50 tries.

Tried

  • 24 hours of active drying
  • speeds of 10-30mm/s
  • flow rate 1-1.2 (100-130%)
  • temps 220-250 (mfg rec is 235-250)
  • 0.4 and 0.6 nozzle
  • Cura and PrusaSlicer

Direct drive (Biqu H2 V2s) on a well-tuned Ender 3 (no issues with ABS, PETG, even nylon). Part fan off. Printing on PP tape (no adhesion issue).

I can get halfway decent looking print with 250C and a Flow rate of ~140% but it eventually jams anyway. Lower temps give super inconsistent extrusion, nozzle spitting chunks intermittently.

At my wits’ end. Any more tips? I don’t have any other TPU ATM, may be just shitty filament? It’s a cheapo polish F3D Filament TPU 93A. Thanks!

  • Cris
    link
    fedilink
    English
    61 year ago

    How old is the filament? If you’ve had it a long time perhaps its taken on too much water (once things get to a certain point it can irreversibly make the filament print poorly, even if you try to dry it)

    I’m not super knowledgeable myself, but I hope someone here is able to provide useful guidance

    • @stooovieOP
      link
      English
      21 year ago

      Completely new and dried for 24 hours in a dedicated dryer. Thanks.

      • Cris
        link
        fedilink
        English
        11 year ago

        Gotcha. Good luck finding answers, and If you figure something out on your own time I’m sure folks would love it if you reported back with your findings. Hopefully someone has some helpful insight :)

  • @tyrant
    link
    English
    31 year ago

    I’d personally try a sample coil from somewhere to rule out potential filament age/moisture/contamination.

  • @franzfurdinand
    link
    English
    21 year ago

    What retraction settings do you have? I’m wondering if maybe that’s contributing to your jamming.

  • @Trainguy
    link
    English
    21 year ago

    These are very edge-case, and I only mention it because you had a lot of helpful details that eliminated stuff, but could the gap between the extruder drive and the hotend opening be too far apart? I’ve had a problem kind of similar where it would jam up the filament there. Otherwise, the other outlandish thing I could think of is maybe the inside of the hotend is pitted and damaged, but that is not as likely.

    I hope this helps at all, or maybe gives you some kind of idea. Good luck!

  • @stooovieOP
    link
    English
    11 year ago

    SOLUTION: runs contrary to common knowledge, but what ultimately helped was:

    • INCREASING print speed. The usual recommendation is the slower the better, but at that point, there’s no pressure control over the filament
    • ENABLING retraction. Again, usual rec is to disable it for flexibles but turns out it alleviates too much backpressure which leads to filament buckling in the extruder

    Also printing hotter than mfg recommends: I printed at 260 (10C over recommended maximum).

    Thanks to u/Over_Pizza_2578 for pointing me to the right - opposite to everything else - direction.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    11 year ago

    Are you using a bi-metallic headbreak? I’ve heard these can make it very difficult to print with TPU (at least with my Volcano style extruder on the Sidewinder X2), though I don’t have any experience with it myself.

    • @stooovieOP
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      Yes, this is probably adding to the situation.

  • monotremata
    link
    fedilink
    11 year ago

    So, one thing to consider is whether you could have remnants of a previous filament getting stuck in your hotend and carbonizing and causing partial clogs. That depends a bit on what you were running just before running this filament. If this is the issue, a cleaning filament can help. Another possibility is that your nozzle isn’t tight against the heatbreak, in which case plastic can accumulate there and cause issues. The only way to fix that is to disassemble the hotend and put it back together correctly–this usually involves tightening the nozzle when it’s hot, but check the details for your specific printer.

    But yeah, it could also just be bad filament. That’s probably the easiest thing to fix, anyway.