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We recommend you clean your printer’s printhead if any issues with your printer are found in the printed document. The linear gradient and radial gradients on this black and white test page will help you know if there is any inconsistency in ink from your printer head. The different intensity graphs on the test page will help you check the sharpness of the print. Talking about this black and white test page, this page has 4 different elements which will help you quickly analyze the quality of the print. This black and white printer test page will help you check your printer’s ink and print quality. No matter which printer you are using, you can test your printer in one click with our free tool. Please connect your printer to any smart device or PC and click the button ‘ Black and White Test Page ‘ below to print. With our free tool, you can do it with just one click. Just pointing that out.We made printing the black and white printer test page easy for you. I do believe we have had this exact same conversation before. if you do not have a MMU unit installed, don't select a hardware profile that says you have it. If you have a different hardware setup selected before you slice the file (the red circled drop down) then you need to change that setting. Once you have one of those, you are ready to create a GCODE file that is going to be intended for your printer. You either need the bunny.STL or bunny.3mF file. The bunny gcode file - if you downloaded it, is useless, delete it. Įach time you plan on printing something, you need to know what filament material you are planning on printing it in, and slice a gcode file for that exact print. If you don't find your brand, you can choose generic. If you are using another brand of PLA or PETG, look for your brand and the type - select the match. If you are printing Prusament PETG, select that. If you are printing Prusament PLA, select that in the drop down list. That is the filament type (profile) setting. To control the temperatures, look at the drop down box above the one I have circled. I have circled the drop down box that you need to use to select the hardware you have. Look at the screen shot of the prusa slicer program above. You choose a filament profile in the slicer. You should not have to "manually" set temps. When you slice for a printer that is not what you own, then load it into your printer as a GCODE file, the intended target is part of the metadata in the GCODE file. RE: Preferred PETG test Prusa Slicer can slice for a number of printers.
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