this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2026
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I'm somewhat puzzled which settings I need to look at in PrusaSlicer to solve those thin slits between perimeters. I've dialed in the flowrate optimally for dimensional correctness and 245°C (PETG) works really well for both flow and overhangs.

At first I thought of extrusion width, but that also increases the distance between each line. Raising the flowrate closes them, but also makes the printed parts grow in each dimension outside if the intended size.

Where am I missing something? Which settings do I need to adjust to not screw up everything else?

EDIT: It's not just corners!

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[–] Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)
[–] MrTolkinghoen@lemmy.zip 1 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

PA can impact more than just corners. It's when the print head is changing speed/direction

[–] Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

The issue is also present on long straight lines though.

[–] MrTolkinghoen@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

Calibration of a printer is very much a cumulitive thing. Looking at your print I think your PA is off, but I would guess that it's a combination of multiple settings. When calibrating a filament, I usually do a sweep of calibrations, and then sometimes even come back to past steps to rerun since the values can impact eachother.

I.e. I typically do in this order per brand of filament type. Always starting with the closest preset I can find. Usually the generic version if there isn't the brands of exact filament as a preset in orca.

Temperatue

Max volumetric speed

Pressure advance

Flow

Retraction

Sometimes back to PA because flow can impact PA

VFA/input shaping (optional)

And then toss a tolerance calibration at it at the end, but I don't typically do this per filament, just do it per printer unless you're about to print some super tolerance intolerant parts

IMO your flow / pa are off and combined are causing this. But idk, if you've already done both those calibrations then I'm not experienced enough to be able to definitively say what the issue is.

Edit: OH, one thing to note, you can increase the flow rate, and then in tolerance you can adjust the shrinkage to get the tolerance correct. So in that scenario increase flowrate, and then jump to tolerance and adjust to get the correct dimensional accuracy. That will make orca slicer auto scale the part dynamically so your final dimensions are correct.