The base is heated. The default base for most printers is a plastic coated 
surface that’s sort of bumpy, for lack of a better description. I replaced mine 
with a sheet of glass for better adhesion. A quick spritz of “Aqua Net” makes 
things stick just fine.

-D


> On Jan 14, 2020, at 3:31 PM, Randy Bennell via Mercedes 
> <mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> 
> On 14/01/2020 11:53 AM, Dan Penoff via Mercedes wrote:
>> Hair spray.
>> 
>> Nozzle temp too cool, or feed rate too high.
>> 
>> And yes, you have to make accommodations for the type of filament you’re 
>> using. It’s always good to get comfortable with a particular type of 
>> filament so you can understand how various changes in the printing process 
>> affect it. Once you’ve got this down it’s a lot easier to troubleshoot when 
>> you do move to a different material.
>> 
>> -D
>> 
>> 
> I don't pay full attention since I don't have a 3D printer and do not think I 
> have enough use for one to venture into that area, but my recollection is 
> that they talk about heating a glass surface for the first layers to bond to.
> 
> RB
> 
> 
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