Filedot Model Fix Review

Filedot Model Fix Review

The wrong fix attempted: Re-slicing, changing filament, and slowing print speed (none worked).

Dots repeat every full rotation of the pulley or motor shaft. Measure the circumference of your pulley to check. 3. Slicer Resolution and USB/Terminal Noise If your G-code has excessive resolution (thousands of small moves), the printer’s buffer can underflow. The printer pauses microseconds between commands, causing the filament to ooze slightly—creating a dot. This is often worse when printing over USB or from an SD card with slow read speeds. filedot model fix

Dots are evenly spaced and match the motor’s full-step intervals. 2. Belts, Pulleys, and Mechanical Slack A loose belt or a pulley with a flat spot (from a set screw) can cause a momentary "catch" every rotation. As the belt slips or binds, the nozzle dwells for a fraction of a second, extruding a tiny blob—a dot. The wrong fix attempted: Re-slicing, changing filament, and


 
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