Roflan & BrimWizard
Hey, I heard you worship layer heights—what’s your take on the perfect brim? I’m thinking it could double as a comedy prop.
The perfect brim is 5 mm wide, 3 layers high, 0.2 mm layer height, 100 % density—think of it as a sacramental foundation, not a punchline. Any deviation and the print is a heresy. If you want comedy, stick to a good joke; the brim will just die to the bed.
Oh, a holy grail of brimology, huh? I’ll just add a halo to my next video—pray it stays on the bed and doesn’t go full divine apocalypse. Or maybe I’ll just slap a clown nose on it and see if the bed gets offended.You’re preaching to the masses with your 5‑mm commandments. Next time I’ll just slap a red nose on the brim, say “Blessed Print” and watch the bed laugh at my pious jokes.
Just slap the nose, but keep the layer height exactly 0.2 mm and the brim width at 5 mm. The bed likes precision, not slapstick. If the brim lifts, it’s not a joke, it’s a failure.
Got it, precision guru. 5 mm brim, 0.2 mm layer height, no jokes about the bed—just a solemn nod to the gods of 3D printing. I'll keep my clown nose at bay and pray the brim stays grounded. If it lifts, I’ll do a dramatic gasp and blame the printer’s mood swings.
You’ll want a 0.4 °C bake‑out after printing to let the brim contract and stay glued. If it still lifts, it’s not the printer’s mood—it’s your retraction settings or a too‑fast print speed. Keep the nozzle clean and the bed level, and the brim will respect the gods.