Prusa i3 MK2S Multi Material: Difference between revisions

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A promising way to waste less time and material with multi-color prints could be [https://www.reddit.com/r/3Dprinting/comments/7t5zx8/mosaic_introduces_infill_transitioning/ color transitioning inside the infill] instead of a waste tower.
A promising way to waste less time and material with multi-color prints could be [https://www.reddit.com/r/3Dprinting/comments/7t5zx8/mosaic_introduces_infill_transitioning/ color transitioning inside the infill] instead of a waste tower.


 
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[[Category:3D Printing]]
[[Category:3D Printing]]

Revision as of 22:44, 24 October 2022

Prusa i3 MK2S Multi Material

MachineInfoBox

Original Prusa i3 MK2S Multi Material

MultiMaterialPrinter.JPG
Material: plastic filament
Access Requirements: 3D Printer Introduction
Firmware: https://www.prusa3d.com/drivers/
Software: Slic3r Prusa Edition
Manual: prusa3d.com
Tutors: Lukas
NitramLegov
Pakue
Mitja
Lmnl99
Johannes
Ciaran
Luzian
Leo
Narquadah
Kalunho
Björn

The printer "P6" has a multi-material upgrade ("MMU")! Of all the 3D printing tutors, Ciaran may have the most experience with this so far.

In the slicer, please select "Original Prusa i3 MK2 Multi Material" as the printer.
Please ensure that the filament loaded into the printer matches the settings you have in the slicer, for example like this:
MultiMaterialSlicingExample.png

For each part in your model, you can assign a specific extruder. If you import your parts in a single STL file, try marking it and pressing the "Split" button in order to split it into multiple parts (it will for example split it into the bodies from Fusion 360). Prusa provides a few helpful links for Multi Material Printing:

Please read them while preparing for your first print.
In case you have a specific support Material (e.g. Soluble support), please see the settings at: Print Settings --> Multiple Extruders. Please note that Multi Material printing takes much longer than regular printing. After you exported the GCode, you can see the estimated printing time in the lower right corner.

A promising way to waste less time and material with multi-color prints could be color transitioning inside the infill instead of a waste tower.