Hi, I have printed a small holder for a Bowden tube to print from my filament dryer outside of the enclosure, but the filament coming out of the tube is tensioned and I don’t know if it will cause problems later. Is this fine to keep or how can I fix this?
This i a Ender 3 V3 SE btw.
I'll say that it can lead to uneven extrusion and even skipped steps on your extruder. How much, and how much that amount matters is entirely dependant on the setup and your workflow.
There are a few 3D printed solutions to keep filament tension neutral using a buffer system. It's not a bad idea to check out some of them.
I think you saw what I saw. The tensioned Bowden tube going from the tool head to the frame. While that might be a problem I think he asked about something else. I only caught that after reading the other comments. But correct me if I am wrong :)
In the picture is no tube going to the toolhead. The white line you see is the filament. The Bowden tube is only connected to the frame. That means that every time the toolhead moves to either side, it will tug on the filament. potentially creating artifacts in the print and maybe even causing underextrusion and slipping extruder gears.
Recommend this. Have a similar setup and you can 3d print spools and order bearings for them. That being said my direct drive filament feeder on my prusa is quite strong. As long as you make smooth curves with your bowden tube it should be ok.
I've never seen a Bowden tube that doesn't go right to the hot end. A bowden tube is meant to make up for not having the extruder right on the hotend and still be able to apply and control the pressure needed to push the filament for the hotend to work at the required extrusion rate, and retract properly.
That should be fine, I've printed tens of kilograms pulling the filament around a sharp corner. As long as it's dry, pla can handle quite a bit of abuse. And it's unlikely to damage your printer or dryer.
In the worse case you might have some dust buildup, keep it clean
Re: dry. I'm convinced PLA doesn't care about moisture. Watched a video of a guy that soaked a roll in a tub of water overnight, then printed off the roll with it still in the tub. Looked exactly the same as it did before the soak.
Mileage may vary of course but ever since then I've been leaving my PLA out and it's never once given me trouble (the infused ones a little bit).
It might. Depending on how much tension there is. Too much and it will cause the filament to slip in the extruder causing under extrusion. If you are not seeing signs of under extrusion then you are fine for now - but that might change if you change filament or anything else. I would try to lower how much tension the filament is under to avoid problems in the future. Otherwise it would be something to keep in mind if you do start seeing signs of under extrusion.