guymark
Printing Ninja
Hi.
Thought I would say hi as I have just bought and assembled an Anet A2 and had a little go to see what it will do. A dinky little test print (still took abuot 20 minutes) was encouraging when printed with PLA. Yet to play with ABS, though that is the material of choice as it is stronger and, as not so dense as PLA, you "get more for your money" both in terms of greater volume for kg and ABS would SEEM to be cheaper too.
The Hat very kindly offered to design and send me the STL file for an adapter to allow me to print from 3" paper rolls even though my spindle is fitted with 2" roll inserts. All in all worked quite well and I learned quite a lot along the way, (dodgy start as bed not quite level etc).
If you look at post six here you can see the two roll adapters made. :-
https://www.printerknowledge.com/th...e-i-can-buy-a-couple.12321/page-2#post-106870
Huge thanks to The Hat as I have not even STARTED to look at designing things, just managed to press the PRINT button and keep various things crossed
If anyone is building the Anet A2 and would like a few minor suggestions, I am more than happy to share a few things I "learned the hard way" during assembly with less than crystal clear instructions.
Nothing that caused damage or couldn'r be "undone and re-done", but I suspect I could have shave around an hour off the build time if a couple of things were not wrong in the assembly illustrations. It seems the A2 is a generic beast made by various people, so perhaps some assembly guides are better than others.
If however it suggests using 12mm M5 screws to attach corner brackets to the aluminium cross section, you will find unless you washer the screws, they will "bottom out" and not allow you to tighten the T nuts properly.
My kit came with washers but not mention of them - so it took a while for the penny to drop, meanwhile I had switched to some M5 10mm screws I had in stock and carried on.
Anyway, sorry for a rather verbose into!
A new toy to learn!
Mark
Thought I would say hi as I have just bought and assembled an Anet A2 and had a little go to see what it will do. A dinky little test print (still took abuot 20 minutes) was encouraging when printed with PLA. Yet to play with ABS, though that is the material of choice as it is stronger and, as not so dense as PLA, you "get more for your money" both in terms of greater volume for kg and ABS would SEEM to be cheaper too.
The Hat very kindly offered to design and send me the STL file for an adapter to allow me to print from 3" paper rolls even though my spindle is fitted with 2" roll inserts. All in all worked quite well and I learned quite a lot along the way, (dodgy start as bed not quite level etc).
If you look at post six here you can see the two roll adapters made. :-
https://www.printerknowledge.com/th...e-i-can-buy-a-couple.12321/page-2#post-106870
Huge thanks to The Hat as I have not even STARTED to look at designing things, just managed to press the PRINT button and keep various things crossed
If anyone is building the Anet A2 and would like a few minor suggestions, I am more than happy to share a few things I "learned the hard way" during assembly with less than crystal clear instructions.
Nothing that caused damage or couldn'r be "undone and re-done", but I suspect I could have shave around an hour off the build time if a couple of things were not wrong in the assembly illustrations. It seems the A2 is a generic beast made by various people, so perhaps some assembly guides are better than others.
If however it suggests using 12mm M5 screws to attach corner brackets to the aluminium cross section, you will find unless you washer the screws, they will "bottom out" and not allow you to tighten the T nuts properly.
My kit came with washers but not mention of them - so it took a while for the penny to drop, meanwhile I had switched to some M5 10mm screws I had in stock and carried on.
Anyway, sorry for a rather verbose into!
A new toy to learn!
Mark