Tangled spools are a user caused issue 99.9% of the time. About the only way a spool could be tangled out of the box is if the manufacturer had to manually rewind it and they screwed up.
Please explain to me how the manufacturer could tangle the spool. Both ends are fixed.
I literally can not imagine how it could be the manufacturers fault.
Honestly idk. It’s happened to me before, but not in the last several years. I know it wasn’t my fault because the tangles were deep in the spool and only uncovered late in a print, so it’s unlikely to have been caused by user error during handling or filament loading.
And even more unlikely to happen during production. Think about it, how would that work? Lift up the filament extruder, take out the spool, run around the extruder and continue after that?just to tangle the filament?
It’s really easy to make a clove hitch- One loop basically just needs to slide under another. It isn’t difficult to imagine that the machine could have a little bit of play or backlash that could affect the ends of a layer in this manner.
I’ve actually seen similar things happen with winches used to drive automated effects in live entertainment.
Buy a spool that isn’t tangled, it will only bring frustration and anger, it’s never just one knot in my experience.
Tangled spools are a user caused issue 99.9% of the time. About the only way a spool could be tangled out of the box is if the manufacturer had to manually rewind it and they screwed up.
True, but sometimes it happens.
Never had a pre-tangled spool. Tangles happen if someone lets go of the end.
Some cheaper brands have poor QC to save on cost, so spools will occasionally have some tangles in it.
Please explain to me how the manufacturer could tangle the spool. Both ends are fixed. I literally can not imagine how it could be the manufacturers fault.
Honestly idk. It’s happened to me before, but not in the last several years. I know it wasn’t my fault because the tangles were deep in the spool and only uncovered late in a print, so it’s unlikely to have been caused by user error during handling or filament loading.
And even more unlikely to happen during production. Think about it, how would that work? Lift up the filament extruder, take out the spool, run around the extruder and continue after that?just to tangle the filament?
That’s not how logic works. When’s the last time you’ve seen that specific manufacturing workflow? Citation needed.
It’s really easy to make a clove hitch- One loop basically just needs to slide under another. It isn’t difficult to imagine that the machine could have a little bit of play or backlash that could affect the ends of a layer in this manner.
I’ve actually seen similar things happen with winches used to drive automated effects in live entertainment.
The last uncleanly-wound spool I had was in 2018. I haven’t paid more than €25 per kg ever, usually €15-20.
I mostly buy petg that costs less than 8-9 euros per kilo. It happens sometimes.
That’s a very low price. Is it quality filament ? Have any links ?
Thanks !
Local manufacturers and bulk prices, unless you are in Ukraine I don’t think names would help. 🙃
Ah damn. Although if your local manufacturer ships to the rest of Europe, I’d be happy to try it out ;)