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I should have checked this a long time ago...

75 degrees = 68 degrees. No wonder I couldn't get things to adhere well sometimes.

As a side note, the temp varies wildly along the plate base. An enclosure would definitely help here.

Has anyone else tested the actual temps versus the set/displayed temps and noticed a difference?

20 comments
  • Yeah tbh it didn't really matter what the number is tube by results not input. If you only get bed adhesion at 80°C there's probably an underlying issue but rock what you got. Haven't tested mine there's probably a variance off true value for a lot of people. No one can deny the results you observe. If people say say it to 75 and that's too low based on your observations either fix your printer if you trust them or crank her up.

  • The edges are going to be cooler if everything is working the way it's designed (especially on a bed slinger), since the heater doesn't go all the way to the edges and because of increased airflow. One of the reasons I was thinking about getting a Prusa XL is because it has multiple independent bed heaters.

    An enclosure will help some. When I'm printing near the edges I also up the bed temp 5 to 10 degrees depending on room temp.

  • I wonder if gluing down a thin layer of borosilicate glass would even out the hotspots as it comes to temperature? maybe place it between the magnetic base and the heater. it'd take longer to come up to temp, though.

    that said, I expect my beds to be 10 degrees cooler than the thermister says- simply because the thermister location is usually closer to the heat source and covered from ambient air. it's all relative anyhow, and every brand/formulation of filament is going to be slightly different as to what works best.

  • Metal flex sheet is going to conduct heat differently than the Creality standard surface plus it's shiny metal meaning it's difficult to measure with IR If you are having issues, then up the bed heat

20 comments