Hey, i am having a lot of trouble printing the chains. I am getting a lot of underextrusion and sometimes it stops extruding completely, could you share your cura settings?
No idea, some of the mounts may be different as well. I would look for STLs of chain mods for your specific printer, or check other prints AnyCubic printers that have user-made remixes for your model printer. If you can't find anything, you could be the pioneer! You could first try printing out the adapter plates for the Vyper and seeing how they fit on yours. Maybe they'll fit perfectly, maybe it'll be close, maybe it'll be completely wrong. I'd love to hear what you find out!
Been having a problem with printing the hotend mount - I have been cracking the tabs when I assemble it. Any suggestions on printing setting or assembly that can help. It's the final part on mine to put in place. Thanks!
@@hopefullyquality The part that attaches to the chain. I actually found a solution for it. You may have to print up that part at 103% to keep it from breaking.
For some reason the extruder chain mount is set up for small chain even though the hotend chain mount is widened. So now I have a loose wide chain that doesn't mate to a small chain mount 🙄 how the hell did this happen?
In the era of information overload, where headlines compete for our attention, clickbaiting has emerged as a popular strategy employed by online content creators. Clickbait refers to enticing headlines or thumbnails designed to lure users into clicking on a link, often leading to shallow or misleading content. While it may seem like an innocent marketing technique, clickbaiting has negative consequences for individuals, society, and the integrity of online media. Firstly, clickbaiting erodes trust between content creators and consumers. When users are constantly exposed to exaggerated or deceptive headlines, they become skeptical of the legitimacy and quality of the information presented. This erosion of trust undermines the credibility of online media as a whole and makes it increasingly difficult for genuine sources to deliver important news and valuable content. As a result, people may become disenchanted, disengaged, and less willing to seek out reliable information. Secondly, clickbaiting fosters an environment of shallow engagement. The sensationalized headlines and thumbnails are designed to pique curiosity and prompt immediate clicks, but the content behind them often fails to deliver on the promise. This leaves readers disappointed and frustrated, leading to a lack of genuine interaction with the material. Users may become conditioned to quick gratification, neglecting in-depth analysis and critical thinking skills that are essential for a well-informed society. Furthermore, clickbaiting contributes to the spread of misinformation. By prioritizing clicks over accuracy, content creators are incentivized to prioritize sensationalism over factual reporting. Misleading headlines can easily misrepresent facts or distort the truth, perpetuating false narratives and sowing confusion among readers. This undermines the democratic principles of an informed citizenry and makes it increasingly challenging to discern fact from fiction. Clickbaiting may generate short-term gains in terms of traffic and views, but its long-term consequences are detrimental. It erodes trust, encourages shallow engagement, and contributes to the spread of misinformation. As consumers, we must be vigilant and critical of the content we consume, questioning the motives behind enticing headlines. Likewise, content creators have a responsibility to prioritize accuracy, reliability, and ethical practices in order to rebuild trust and foster an informed society. Ultimately, a media landscape free from clickbaiting is essential for promoting quality journalism, facilitating critical thinking, and nurturing a more informed citizenry.
This is the first video of yours I've watched and I found it very informative! Unfortunately I was then curious as to what other content you produced, viewed your "ham" video and decided I could never support a "man" who created something like that!
Reading this comment made me reflect on myself. My thoughts. My actions. My mentality. How have they led me here? Is it too late to come back? What caused me to become the monster I am in the first place? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? How much longer can I put on this charade? How close am I to my metaphorical finish line? Will I ever get there? Would I benefit from completion or would I feel more empty than I was before I got there? Will I be more empty than I was before I got there? I think I'm edging oh god am I edging I think so oh my god yes I am I am I am sorry idk what that was all about thanks for the support grum!
Quality toturial! My regular printer now prints in 3D!
Very informative, I can see this video helping a lot of people.
Excellent, helpful video! Thankyou.
Hey, i am having a lot of trouble printing the chains. I am getting a lot of underextrusion and sometimes it stops extruding completely, could you share your cura settings?
@@boydfun8342 no longer have the printer or the Cura settings :( best of luck you can tune these nicely
So I have the Kobra Max wich basically is just a big vyper. How many parts more i have to print?
No idea, some of the mounts may be different as well.
I would look for STLs of chain mods for your specific printer, or check other prints AnyCubic printers that have user-made remixes for your model printer.
If you can't find anything, you could be the pioneer! You could first try printing out the adapter plates for the Vyper and seeing how they fit on yours. Maybe they'll fit perfectly, maybe it'll be close, maybe it'll be completely wrong. I'd love to hear what you find out!
Been having a problem with printing the hotend mount - I have been cracking the tabs when I assemble it. Any suggestions on printing setting or assembly that can help. It's the final part on mine to put in place. Thanks!
What do you mean tabs? The part that attaches to the chain? Or the part that attaches to the wheels?
@@hopefullyquality The part that attaches to the chain. I actually found a solution for it. You may have to print up that part at 103% to keep it from breaking.
Awesome man! Glad you found a fix! @@navyskiier
Same issue here. everytime I have tried to snap the part down on the wheels it breaks :(
I increasded the print size to 102% - it's just a little loose now... maybe try the same at either 101% or 102% @@landonwoodruff
what temps are you running?
200 and 60 for just pla, 205 and 65 for petg
Can you share your gcode files?
Sorry what exactly are you asking for? The gcode files for the parts I printed?
@@hopefullyquality yes
For some reason the extruder chain mount is set up for small chain even though the hotend chain mount is widened. So now I have a loose wide chain that doesn't mate to a small chain mount 🙄 how the hell did this happen?
i have no idea o_o have you found the issue yet?
"Every 3d Printer should have this" So anyway, go get a anycubic vyper-
Hey now I gotta have a somewhat click-baity title for the first few days 😎🥲
@@hopefullyquality.@@hopefullyquality
In the era of information overload, where headlines compete for our attention, clickbaiting has emerged as a popular strategy employed by online content creators. Clickbait refers to enticing headlines or thumbnails designed to lure users into clicking on a link, often leading to shallow or misleading content. While it may seem like an innocent marketing technique, clickbaiting has negative consequences for individuals, society, and the integrity of online media.
Firstly, clickbaiting erodes trust between content creators and consumers. When users are constantly exposed to exaggerated or deceptive headlines, they become skeptical of the legitimacy and quality of the information presented. This erosion of trust undermines the credibility of online media as a whole and makes it increasingly difficult for genuine sources to deliver important news and valuable content. As a result, people may become disenchanted, disengaged, and less willing to seek out reliable information.
Secondly, clickbaiting fosters an environment of shallow engagement. The sensationalized headlines and thumbnails are designed to pique curiosity and prompt immediate clicks, but the content behind them often fails to deliver on the promise. This leaves readers disappointed and frustrated, leading to a lack of genuine interaction with the material. Users may become conditioned to quick gratification, neglecting in-depth analysis and critical thinking skills that are essential for a well-informed society.
Furthermore, clickbaiting contributes to the spread of misinformation. By prioritizing clicks over accuracy, content creators are incentivized to prioritize sensationalism over factual reporting. Misleading headlines can easily misrepresent facts or distort the truth, perpetuating false narratives and sowing confusion among readers. This undermines the democratic principles of an informed citizenry and makes it increasingly challenging to discern fact from fiction.
Clickbaiting may generate short-term gains in terms of traffic and views, but its long-term consequences are detrimental. It erodes trust, encourages shallow engagement, and contributes to the spread of misinformation. As consumers, we must be vigilant and critical of the content we consume, questioning the motives behind enticing headlines. Likewise, content creators have a responsibility to prioritize accuracy, reliability, and ethical practices in order to rebuild trust and foster an informed society. Ultimately, a media landscape free from clickbaiting is essential for promoting quality journalism, facilitating critical thinking, and nurturing a more informed citizenry.
This is the first video of yours I've watched and I found it very informative! Unfortunately I was then curious as to what other content you produced, viewed your "ham" video and decided I could never support a "man" who created something like that!
Reading this comment made me reflect on myself. My thoughts. My actions. My mentality. How have they led me here? Is it too late to come back? What caused me to become the monster I am in the first place? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? Am I edging? How much longer can I put on this charade? How close am I to my metaphorical finish line? Will I ever get there? Would I benefit from completion or would I feel more empty than I was before I got there? Will I be more empty than I was before I got there? I think I'm edging oh god am I edging I think so oh my god yes I am I am I am
sorry idk what that was all about thanks for the support grum!