Testing is focused on some details: dimensional accuracy, precision precision, and printing quality. Watching is a visual examination where I check to make sure that the flight works well on the spill, without any crushing over that can cause snatching during printing.
Print quality is used using CNET Calibration Test that I use to test all the 3D printers I review. When checking the quality of the tinse, I am looking for noticeable rough and lost festivals where moisture or other pollutions have disrupted the melting and cooling process.
Dimensional accuracy is probably the most important test as it measures the consistency of the tasting. When you go ahead, the tasting in Qatar changes and the 3D printer will cause more or the underwritten flames. This produces significant stains in your model, or even worse, complete failure. You want the same diameter of the content on the whole path.
To measure the accuracy, I take a piece of tetanus 5 meters (16.4 feet) from the middle and end of the roll, and measure the diameter at four equal distance points. Then I add all these measurements and divide it to 12 tomorrow – the total number of measurements – giving me an average of an average of the whole roll. Most of the modern printers use 1.75 mm flight, so you want the flime to be closer to it.
The Great Flimination has a difference of plus or minus 0.02 mm, good fantasy pulse or minus is 0.03 mm and to some extent the filament is anything or minus 0.05 mm. The average we recommend here is at least 0.03 mm.


