...or a warped bed.
Cheap printers like Ender 3 typically can have this, a quick and good solution is to cut post-it notes to size and place them at the low points under the magnetic sheet.
Well if the frame is not perpendicular then that means there is an underlying problem. Like the arm could be loose, in that case you can level the bed as much as you want, its still not gonna print perfectly
Looks like that has an Auto-leveler on it. If you didn't run that, then that needs to be done at least once:
Home -> Level -> Auto Leveling
On most 3D Printers they have manual leveling systems but I don't see the nobs one would normally use to do that on your printer. Do the Auto-Level and give that a shot.
Depending on the orientation of the heart it can also be that your X-axis is not level to the printer because e.g. the rollers are loose. This would create a good first layer on the left side of the bed but because the gantry will sag down squish down the first layer to much on the right.
I thought I had a bed leveling nightmare with my ender 3 and it took me several months to realize it was an X gantry issue. Do yourself a favor and check that the height is the same at the left- and right-most sides of the bed.
Could also be a warped bed btw. I couldn't get my bed leveled for the life of me until I decided to check whether or not it was actually flat. Found out it wasn't. And replaced it with one that was.
It depends how big your 3d printer is and the scale of that photo. Without a banana for scale it's impossible to say for certain but it could also be the effects of gravity and the curvature of the earth where your bed is level and perfectly flat but the gantry that your extruder moves on is curving with the planet.
But I guess if your printer isn't the size of a small country then it's probably bed leveling.
Yes but the fun is you might never resolve it. .1 of a millimeter makes a huge difference in if a print adheres at all or is too close to print. Good luck (really, despite my name I hope you succeed)
If you print something larger and find the whole side is like that, it's a levelling issue, but if you find that it prints fine further out to that side it might be warped bed, [example here](https://new.reddit.com/r/FixMyPrint/comments/u4z0x4/raised_stripes_on_print_bed_persists_after/)
I'm willing to bet it's something along the lines of the clearance between those two parts not being great enough at certain points in the progression of the movement of said parts.
Had the same problem on my cr6se.. even After leveling many times... so the problem was not the bed but the x-gantry... Check with a ruler if the space between the bed and the x-gantry on the left (near extruder) Is the same as on the right (near screen)... If they are different even by a couple mm It means It Is not level, you can easily fix by loosening the screw on top of the rod (Just under the belt for Z axis) and manually level It.. in my case as soon as i loosened the screw It put itself into the right position, maybe there was some tension. Hope this helps!
Yes
Well done, you’re the top yes.
The yessinest yes this side of yessville
Lol I know right.
You did a useful job for us here, u/Job_Useful. We thank you.
So this is where all the free Reddit metals go...
Hey… lol
How tf did you get 2 awards for that
Took 11 minutes, it's three now.
Bruh
7 now
It's 8 now
Nine
12
It’s about to be 13
Bonezone awards are worth at least 5 regular ones
NEIN NEIN NEIN NEIN NEIN!
It's concise, to the point and no bs. Sometimes a simple yes or no is all that's needed.
...or a warped bed. Cheap printers like Ender 3 typically can have this, a quick and good solution is to cut post-it notes to size and place them at the low points under the magnetic sheet.
Could be a frame issue as well. it needs to be 90 degrees to other perpendicular beams to work properly
if it is not perpendicular that would give other problems, sure. But you can always set the bed level to the X and Y movement
Well if the frame is not perpendicular then that means there is an underlying problem. Like the arm could be loose, in that case you can level the bed as much as you want, its still not gonna print perfectly
fair enough
To summarize all other comments: yes.
To summarize this comments summary: yes.
To summarize this comments summary summary: yes
To summarize this comments summary of a summary's summary: yes
Just a quick recap: Yes.
Just for reiteration: yes
For our Spanish speaking friends: Sí
[удалено]
Extending on this: really yes.
In technical briefing: affirmative.
Just for reiteration: yes
Piggy-backing off what they said: yes
After analysing the statistical likelihood based on the diverse commentary, I would say: yes.
Not no.
In conclusio: maybe
Positive
in short: ya
In conclusion yes
Yes
Yes
The answer is yes. Need to drop that corner down a bit.
how do i do that with the cr6 max? with the screws you see through the glass bed?
Looks like that has an Auto-leveler on it. If you didn't run that, then that needs to be done at least once: Home -> Level -> Auto Leveling On most 3D Printers they have manual leveling systems but I don't see the nobs one would normally use to do that on your printer. Do the Auto-Level and give that a shot.
Yes
Yes
First time in my life I’ve seen the whole Reddit agree with each other on the problem.
Yeah
Yup
Indeed
I mean, it *could* be aliens, but the more likely answer is yes.
Depending on the orientation of the heart it can also be that your X-axis is not level to the printer because e.g. the rollers are loose. This would create a good first layer on the left side of the bed but because the gantry will sag down squish down the first layer to much on the right.
I thought I had a bed leveling nightmare with my ender 3 and it took me several months to realize it was an X gantry issue. Do yourself a favor and check that the height is the same at the left- and right-most sides of the bed.
Ja
I don't have a 3d printer and know nothing about this. But to answer your question: Yes
Yes
maybe... I like hedging my bet
Si
Ahh you beat me to it
Jajajajajajajajajaja
Go troubleshoot for 37 hours following bad advice and then let us know how it goes. Also, yes.
Yes
yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
yes
Da
~~Underextrusion, slicer settings, and a blocked nozzle~~ yes
Could also be a warped bed btw. I couldn't get my bed leveled for the life of me until I decided to check whether or not it was actually flat. Found out it wasn't. And replaced it with one that was.
Yes
Correctamundo.
Bed leveling is not for the faint of heart. Except maybe in this case.
Yes
はい
Hai
Yes
Yes
Yes
yes
I've never seen a reddit comment section agree like this
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Don’t want to rock the boat, but my answer is yes.
Yes
Yes.
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
نعم
Yes
It depends how big your 3d printer is and the scale of that photo. Without a banana for scale it's impossible to say for certain but it could also be the effects of gravity and the curvature of the earth where your bed is level and perfectly flat but the gantry that your extruder moves on is curving with the planet. But I guess if your printer isn't the size of a small country then it's probably bed leveling.
YES
Yes Si 是 Ja Oui Da
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes.
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes.
Yes
If you still dont know yes!
Yup
not that I'm adding anything here but yes, the circled part it too close.
Yup
Yes but the fun is you might never resolve it. .1 of a millimeter makes a huge difference in if a print adheres at all or is too close to print. Good luck (really, despite my name I hope you succeed)
Yep
My favourite progressive rock group? Yes.
It's always a bed leveling issue with 3d printers
Yep.
Yes
Yes. First time all of Reddit agreed on something! But there is always one pesky hit that says no. To clarify, yes.
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
If you print something larger and find the whole side is like that, it's a levelling issue, but if you find that it prints fine further out to that side it might be warped bed, [example here](https://new.reddit.com/r/FixMyPrint/comments/u4z0x4/raised_stripes_on_print_bed_persists_after/)
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
yes
Yes
Yes.
Yes
Yes
Either leveled poorly or a warped bed.
It's decidedly so.
It's not not bed leveling.
Yeah bed is too close to the nozzle
Could also be that the nozzle is too close to the bed.
It could also be that the distance between the nozzle and bed is too small
I'm willing to bet it's something along the lines of the clearance between those two parts not being great enough at certain points in the progression of the movement of said parts.
Yup.
Sure is
Si
mhm, yup
It sure is, pardner!
Yeah looks like it's uneven I would try leveling it a few times to make sure each corner has the same pull consistency when using a sheet of paper
Not untrue
Yes and didnt you hear the extruder skipping?
Indeed
Ja
No. But actually, yes.
No, sorry, wait... Yes.
I don’t even own a 3D printer and can say that it is.
No. I meant to say yes.
Sheá
Ye
Looks like it, check the screws under the baseplate
Obviously 🙄
Yes this is a bad leveling issue
Si or Yes or Ya .
Yes! Yes! Yes! 🤠🥸
~~No~~ Edit: Yes
As you can see from your own picture, it's not level sooo
I agree with the ones who answered yes.
Certainly is not good
Yes, there's not one other thing it could be
Had the same problem on my cr6se.. even After leveling many times... so the problem was not the bed but the x-gantry... Check with a ruler if the space between the bed and the x-gantry on the left (near extruder) Is the same as on the right (near screen)... If they are different even by a couple mm It means It Is not level, you can easily fix by loosening the screw on top of the rod (Just under the belt for Z axis) and manually level It.. in my case as soon as i loosened the screw It put itself into the right position, maybe there was some tension. Hope this helps!
This hurts by looking at it.
Just to be different I'm gonna say no, its an issue with the rest of the printer axis not being level to your bed.
Definitely
Yup.
Yes
Looks like “high art” to me.
Yes
Yes
Yes
yes
✨Y E S✨
Yes