klipper-dgus/docs/Pressure_Advance.md

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This document provides information on tuning the "pressure advance"
configuration variable for a particular nozzle and filament. The
pressure advance feature can be helpful in reducing ooze. For more
information on how pressure advance is implemented see the
[kinematics](Kinematics.md) document.
Tuning pressure advance
=======================
Pressure advance does two useful things - it reduces ooze during
non-extrude moves and it reduces blobbing during cornering. This guide
uses the second feature (reducing blobbing during cornering) as a
mechanism for tuning.
In order to calibrate pressure advance the printer must be configured
and operational. The tuning test involves printing objects and
inspecting the differences between objects. It is a good idea to read
this document in full prior to running the test.
Use a slicer to generate g-code for the large hollow square found in
[docs/prints/square.stl](prints/square.stl). Use a high speed (eg,
100mm/s) and a coarse layer height (the layer height should be around
75% of the nozzle diameter). It is fine to use a low infill (eg, 10%).
Use a low cornering speed during the test by issuing the following
G-Code command: `SET_VELOCITY_LIMIT SQUARE_CORNER_VELOCITY=0
ACCEL=500`. This will make the nozzle travel slower through corners
and thus emphasize the effects of extruder pressure.
For the first print use a pressure advance of zero by running
`SET_PRESSURE_ADVANCE ADVANCE=0.000`. Then print at least 10 layers of
the test object. While the object is printing, make a note of which
direction the head is moving during external perimeters. What many
people see here is blobbing occurring at the corners - extra filament
at the corner in the direction the head travels followed by a possible
lack of filament on the side immediately after that corner:
![corner-blob](img/corner-blob.jpg)
This blobbing is the result of pressure in the extruder being released
as a blob when the head slows down to corner.
The next step is to increase pressure advance (start with
`SET_PRESSURE_ADVANCE ADVANCE=0.050`) and reprint the test object.
With pressure advance, the extruder will retract when the head slows
down, thus countering the pressure buildup and ideally eliminate the
blobbing.
If a test run is done with a pressure advance setting that is too
high, one typically sees a dimple in the corner followed by possible
blobbing after the corner (too much filament is retracted during slow
down and then too much filament is extruded during the following speed
up after cornering):
![corner-dimple](img/corner-dimple.jpg)
The goal is to find the smallest pressure advance value that results
in good quality corners:
![corner-good](img/corner-good.jpg)
Typical pressure advance values are between 0.050 and 1.000 (the high
end usually only with bowden extruders). If there is no significant
improvement after gradually increasing pressure advance to 1.000, then
pressure advance is unlikely to improve the quality of prints. Return
to a default configuration with pressure advance disabled.
Although this tuning exercise directly improves the quality of
corners, it's worth remembering that a good pressure advance
configuration also reduces ooze throughout the print.
At the completion of this test, update the extruder's pressure_advance
setting in the configuration file and issue a RESTART command. The
RESTART command will also return the acceleration and cornering speeds
to their normal values.
Important Notes
===============
* The pressure advance value is dependent on the extruder, the nozzle,
and the filament. It is common for filament from different
manufactures or with different pigments to require significantly
different pressure advance values. Therefore, one should calibrate
pressure advance on each printer and with each spool of filament.
* Printing temperature and extrusion rates can impact pressure
advance. Be sure to tune the extruder
[E steps](http://reprap.org/wiki/Triffid_Hunter%27s_Calibration_Guide#E_steps)
and
[nozzle temperature](http://reprap.org/wiki/Triffid_Hunter%27s_Calibration_Guide#Nozzle_Temperature)
prior to tuning pressure advance.
* It is not unusual for one corner of the test print to be
consistently different than the other three corners. This typically
occurs when the slicer arranges to always change Z height at that
corner. If this occurs, then ignore that corner and tune pressure
advance using the other three corners.
* If a high pressure advance value (eg, over 0.200) is used then one
may find that the extruder skips when returning to the printer's
normal acceleration. The pressure advance system accounts for
pressure by pushing in extra filament during acceleration and
retracting that filament during deceleration. With a high
acceleration and high pressure advance the extruder may not have
enough torque to push the required filament. If this occurs, either
use a lower acceleration value or disable pressure advance.
* Once pressure advance is tuned in Klipper, it may still be useful to
configure a small retract value in the slicer (eg, 0.75mm) and to
utilize the slicer's "wipe on retract option" if available. These
slicer settings may help counteract ooze caused by filament cohesion
(filament pulled out of the nozzle due to the stickiness of the
plastic). It is recommended to disable the slicer's "z-lift on
retract" option.