Since Z is working all the time, it means that a horizontal straight line on the model will be printed as a curve consistent with the curvature of the bed... In my opinion, only the first layer should be taken into account so that the plastic sticks well. Everyone will manually adjust the bed anyway, and bed leveling is only a precise correction.
Wow, impressive result. But what about if the bed is warped? So can you show the results, when you put washers u der the build plate, simulationg a warped bed?
Thats what i was thinking, i cant make a single print in my ender 3 s1 pro without calibrating it over and over again, and i cant make that perfect 1st layer on all the build plate. Even using klipper, and making a 11x11 mesh.
Nice animations and editing.
Thanks 👍
Since Z is working all the time, it means that a horizontal straight line on the model will be printed as a curve consistent with the curvature of the bed...
In my opinion, only the first layer should be taken into account so that the plastic sticks well. Everyone will manually adjust the bed anyway, and bed leveling is only a precise correction.
We might have to test that theory, just to see how much the mesh compensates for that if any 🤔
Turning the corner screws was to tram not level the bed.
That is correct Mark, but most new users know the process as bed levelling.
Very interesting, thanks!!!
Wow, impressive result. But what about if the bed is warped? So can you show the results, when you put washers u der the build plate, simulationg a warped bed?
Thats what i was thinking, i cant make a single print in my ender 3 s1 pro without calibrating it over and over again, and i cant make that perfect 1st layer on all the build plate. Even using klipper, and making a 11x11 mesh.