Dude you are the GOAT. I've been trying to figure out these settings forever and you explained them in a way I could understand. Given I'm running on near zero caffeine and little sleep I need things explained like I'm a 2 year old rn.
A bit of feedback for an otherwise great video. The first 1/3 of the video was explaining why supports are a pain. I'm not sure about others, but I found this video because I already knew that and was looking for help on how to make it easier. At about the 2:40 mark is when the value of the video really took off for me. Please pardon the comments from the peanut gallery, but please know it comes from a place of respect for the effort that goes into making videos like this. Thanks!!
Can't find the " XY Separation " in Bambu Lab Studio... do you know what equals that? I think it is "Support/Object XY distance" but that is mentioned in mm and not %
Holy crap! Changing the Z spacing to be double the layer height (0.4mm in my case) was a game changer! I also upped the path distance from 2mm to 3mm. My prints are coming out great and my supports remove easily! Many thanks
I found this video after slicing my finger open trying to rip the supports off a battery dispenser I printed (that actually broke while I was trying to get the supports off). Thanks for the video!
I keep coming back to this. Thanks for the prefect help. The setting you recommended in the description have real saved me time and prep work. THUMBS UP :)
Hello, and thanks for making this video. I'm new to this, and was hoping you could help me. I was looking at your recommended settings and I'm having trouble finding these in Ultimaker Cura. I dont see options for: Top interface layers, interface pattern spacing, or xy separation.
Do these slicer settings you mention have the same name in Cura? I always have the hardest time with supports and try to avoid using it whenever necessary. Thank you!
Thank you so much! Great explanation. I’m guessing your settings are the minimum spacing and distances to start at, do you have as much luck doubling these space settings? Or do you see more failure trying to increase them?
Sometimes you end up with a spaghetti failure if you go too far with the settings, so I usually try double the layer height and find it works well. You can also try tree supports which from my experience are pretty amazing and detach easier
One remark on the video: the volume is pretty low compared to other videos. The quality is fine, but even at max volume on my tablet it's pretty low - especially for my ears ...
I came looking for help after some tree supports turned into a fused, bombed out coral reef on a print and just tried again with these settings and it was so much cleaner- thanks!
Great explanation and just at the right time. My last print (supports) annoyed the living sh** out of me, will try it your way and hope for the best ;) Thank you!
Printing vertically on my FDM printer works best for me. I generally avoid printing horizontally like this because it makes the layer lines stand out more. Printing it vertically leads to more layer lines and thus a better finish, so I do that. You can try to split pieces into several parts, but that is a hassle and I don't know how to make the joins inconspicuous.
don't use cura. had many problems with it. use orca slicer. way better. and find a support calibration that will print faster to quickly find and tune.
Of course for some parts it doesn't matter the orientation of the print, but beware that, for some mechanical parts, which one you choose as Z axis can make the difference (about resistance, accuracy and so on).
I user a 3D printet (UltaMaker s3). I have a hand anatomy with some unconnected bones. I want to use support rods of 2mm to connect various pieces of bones using a different color. Please advise on the softwate I need to achieve this. I use ultramaker cura softwate but I understand for connecting bars I need a software like blender.
Figured out there are many tools for removing stubborn or poorly designed supports besides the snips your printer came with; needle-nosed pliers, eyeglass-sized screwdriver kit (the flatheads), box-cutters (a good one works better than the $5 home depot version) and you can even employ a soldering iron to melt down excess until it's small enough to file.!
Where do you find "Tree supports" in Cura? In "Supports" there are 6 choices like "tree support branch angle/distance/diameter" etc but I don't see just "tree supports" anywhere? Thanks much
Great video, ironically I'm also printing a Mando helmet as well , but I have an Ender3 V2 Neo so I can't print it in one shot like you, it's 8 pieces and my first piece probably used more support filament than the piece itself (top-left-back), Can you tell me where to learn how to make the support piece much smaller? The support alone was 5 by 3 by 2 and took 11 hours! Thanks for helping out a noob dad
If you can use cura or prusa slicer, select tree supports or organic supports. That's going to cut WAY down on material used, and they seem to be easier to remove.
my slicer (orcaslicer) shows the xy seperation in terms of mm rather than %. what should i use as a value of that? i'm guessing it should be 75% of one of the numbers
I have mine from two days, only one question, its normal see the firt layer of strings in the back of prints? For back i mean the “ass” the part that touch the bad
Hey Brother, been doing my homework since we last spoke, I bet most folks new to 3DP will have these questions; How can you tell if the STL you found used unnecessary support? (I use Cura) 2) How will we know if the settings we change to minimize supports made it inadequate (not supported well enough)? It would be heartbreaking in a 12 hour print to find it failed skimping on supports, does Cura show us if the print might fail? I realize it will be trial and error sometimes, and we want to save material, have faster prints, less support removal work so the benefits are massive, I'd just like to learn the generic settings, as would every 3DP fan. Thanks my friend, liked and subbed
Definitely going to try some of these settings. I just ruined an all day print trying to remove tree supports. The print was absolutely perfect otherwise.
my ender 3 can print a death whistle with a complex bottom and i can pull all the supports off in one pull. no matter what i do i cant get my neptune 3 to do the same to the point where i just gave up and only do that print on my ender
Hey there, Was wondering if you could reach out for a one on one discussion of supports and stickiness. I have tried multiple prints and have questions. Let me know - Richie
When I click a video for a topic as specific as this I don't want a historynlesson of what support material is. Ni already know that, I just want a better way to take it off without burning 7 minutes
I was about to rewatch the video to get the settings written down and then you said the settings are in the description and that earns you a subscribe
Dude you are the GOAT. I've been trying to figure out these settings forever and you explained them in a way I could understand. Given I'm running on near zero caffeine and little sleep I need things explained like I'm a 2 year old rn.
A bit of feedback for an otherwise great video. The first 1/3 of the video was explaining why supports are a pain. I'm not sure about others, but I found this video because I already knew that and was looking for help on how to make it easier. At about the 2:40 mark is when the value of the video really took off for me. Please pardon the comments from the peanut gallery, but please know it comes from a place of respect for the effort that goes into making videos like this. Thanks!!
Can't find the " XY Separation " in Bambu Lab Studio... do you know what equals that?
I think it is "Support/Object XY distance" but that is mentioned in mm and not %
This saved my world and made removing supports super easy. Thanks for the info!!!
Holy crap! Changing the Z spacing to be double the layer height (0.4mm in my case) was a game changer! I also upped the path distance from 2mm to 3mm. My prints are coming out great and my supports remove easily!
Many thanks
I found this video after slicing my finger open trying to rip the supports off a battery dispenser I printed (that actually broke while I was trying to get the supports off). Thanks for the video!
I’ve definitely done that more than once! Hope these settings help
I keep coming back to this. Thanks for the prefect help. The setting you recommended in the description have real saved me time and prep work. THUMBS UP :)
Hello, and thanks for making this video. I'm new to this, and was hoping you could help me. I was looking at your recommended settings and I'm having trouble finding these in Ultimaker Cura. I dont see options for: Top interface layers, interface pattern spacing, or xy separation.
same
Do these slicer settings you mention have the same name in Cura? I always have the hardest time with supports and try to avoid using it whenever necessary. Thank you!
Thank you so much! Great explanation. I’m guessing your settings are the minimum spacing and distances to start at, do you have as much luck doubling these space settings? Or do you see more failure trying to increase them?
Sometimes you end up with a spaghetti failure if you go too far with the settings, so I usually try double the layer height and find it works well. You can also try tree supports which from my experience are pretty amazing and detach easier
lego example was so perfect and genius
Thank you, (i subbed before i even started your video)
One remark on the video: the volume is pretty low compared to other videos. The quality is fine, but even at max volume on my tablet it's pretty low - especially for my ears ...
Thanks for the feedback, i'll be sure to adjust the levels going forward.
No problem with sound at all
Sounded fine to me and looking forward to testing this out 😊
Sounds great to me loud and clear 🗣️
Thanks a bunch! Had a hard time with fusing Supports. Your video helped a lot
I came looking for help after some tree supports turned into a fused, bombed out coral reef on a print and just tried again with these settings and it was so much cleaner- thanks!
I’ve had a real hard time removing supports n a Pit Droid. Thx I’ll try some of your settings.
Sadly I can not find settings with those names in Cura. Do you think they might have changed the names?
sa e
You have to activate advance setting in preferences in cura it's strange
@@eliazarelizondo7075 Oh, OK. Thank you soo much!
@@theashbot4097 no problem brother it's kinda odd and confusing but I figured it out through experimenting lol
Great explanation and just at the right time. My last print (supports) annoyed the living sh** out of me, will try it your way and hope for the best ;) Thank you!
Let me know how it works out!
I'm trying these suggestions now. Either way great video and loved the Lego example. Thank you for the awesome video!
Printing vertically on my FDM printer works best for me.
I generally avoid printing horizontally like this because it makes the layer lines stand out more. Printing it vertically leads to more layer lines and thus a better finish, so I do that. You can try to split pieces into several parts, but that is a hassle and I don't know how to make the joins inconspicuous.
Thank you very much, gonna try tweaking the support settings now !
Awesome! Let me know how the new settings work out for you
i cant find half these settings on cura or im just dumb
same
don't use cura. had many problems with it. use orca slicer. way better. and find a support calibration that will print faster to quickly find and tune.
Of course for some parts it doesn't matter the orientation of the print, but beware that, for some mechanical parts, which one you choose as Z axis can make the difference (about resistance, accuracy and so on).
Yes, definitely a great point. If its a part that will be under any type of mechanical stress, aligning the layers appropriately is very important!
I user a 3D printet (UltaMaker s3). I have a hand anatomy with some unconnected bones. I want to use support rods of 2mm to connect various pieces of bones using a different color. Please advise on the softwate I need to achieve this. I use ultramaker cura softwate but I understand for connecting bars I need a software like blender.
Outstanding !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Figured out there are many tools for removing stubborn or poorly designed supports besides the snips your printer came with; needle-nosed pliers, eyeglass-sized screwdriver kit (the flatheads), box-cutters (a good one works better than the $5 home depot version) and you can even employ a soldering iron to melt down excess until it's small enough to file.!
I can't find these settings in Cura. Looking at "Setting Visibility", I see the "Support Z Distance" but that's it.
in milimeters (I have 35 mm) currently, what would 75% of that be?
Can you recommend settings for ideamaker?
Where do you find "Tree supports" in Cura? In "Supports" there are 6 choices like "tree support branch angle/distance/diameter" etc but I don't see just "tree supports" anywhere? Thanks much
If you already see options about tree supports, then you are already using tree supports. The type of support you use is chosen in a drop-down menu
TY
Great video, ironically I'm also printing a Mando helmet as well , but I have an Ender3 V2 Neo so I can't print it in one shot like you, it's 8 pieces and my first piece probably used more support filament than the piece itself (top-left-back), Can you tell me where to learn how to make the support piece much smaller? The support alone was 5 by 3 by 2 and took 11 hours! Thanks for helping out a noob dad
If you can use cura or prusa slicer, select tree supports or organic supports. That's going to cut WAY down on material used, and they seem to be easier to remove.
@@ALLYOURTECH3DP Thank you kindly
my slicer (orcaslicer) shows the xy seperation in terms of mm rather than %. what should i use as a value of that? i'm guessing it should be 75% of one of the numbers
I've used very similar settings and I still struggle with PETG supports. Pla Is always a breeze for me. Will have to give it some more fiddling.
PETG can be a pain sometimes. You might increase the z distance and spacing a bit more.
I’m struggling with PLA+ already 😂 any tips?
@@TeaGamingPanda I found that using tree supports or organic supports helps a bit.
@@ajciccone88 Gotcha! Def gonna try now and then, thank you!
What would these settings translate to in Orca Slicer? The settings there are a bit different
at 3:10 I loved the connective tissue analogy because i have ehlers danlos a genetic connective tissue disorder
oi use cura and i cant seem to actually find the settings you have listed like XY Separation
I have mine from two days, only one question, its normal see the firt layer of strings in the back of prints? For back i mean the “ass” the part that touch the bad
If I print something small, like a 4x4x4 cm cube, can I put even less supports?
And what about something bigger (15x15x15 cm cube)?
Thanks!
Great share!!! Thank you!
Will these setting work on a Ender 3?
Prolly depends on the printer. I'm using an Ender 3 SI Pro and these settings work
Hey Brother, been doing my homework since we last spoke, I bet most folks new to 3DP will have these questions; How can you tell if the STL you found used unnecessary support? (I use Cura)
2) How will we know if the settings we change to minimize supports made it inadequate (not supported well enough)? It would be heartbreaking in a 12 hour print to find it failed skimping on supports, does Cura show us if the print might fail? I realize it will be trial and error sometimes, and we want to save material, have faster prints, less support removal work so the benefits are massive, I'd just like to learn the generic settings, as would every 3DP fan. Thanks my friend, liked and subbed
Definitely going to try some of these settings. I just ruined an all day print trying to remove tree supports. The print was absolutely perfect otherwise.
Thank you so much
Hope it helps!!
my ender 3 can print a death whistle with a complex bottom and i can pull all the supports off in one pull. no matter what i do i cant get my neptune 3 to do the same to the point where i just gave up and only do that print on my ender
Thank you !
Hey there, Was wondering if you could reach out for a one on one discussion of supports and stickiness. I have tried multiple prints and have questions. Let me know - Richie
A 3d print is a 2 dimensional object layering process, with support for overhang !!!
Actually filament would not stack up if it were 2d 😊
good video but the volume is so low that even at 100% I have trouble hearing certain parts
Thank You
What? I can't hear you. Jokes aside, great information. Volume level is VERY low, though
Audio? Can't hear you
your sound is very low
Manual supporta
When I click a video for a topic as specific as this I don't want a historynlesson of what support material is. Ni already know that, I just want a better way to take it off without burning 7 minutes
Wish you would have gotten straight to the point without explaining what support is we all know we aren’t stupid
The video is for people new to 3d printing that have very little experience with supports.
@@allyourtechaiignore the troll, you are just fine
@@hugosinnicks dude shut up not everyone is a troll
@@allyourtechai Agreed, ignore the troll!!! Your explanation was perfect!
So everything apart from easy to remove supports