

Yes to both.


Yes to both.


If the first layer is good, this looks like some sort of over-extrusion.
How many layers up is this? The more solid layers, the less overextrusion it takes to get this pattern.
And yes, it’s normal to have it in areas like this, with no good explanation of why it’s a problem “there”, and not “there”.
A good closeup would help diagnose this. Maybe even a nice closeup video of how it looks while it’s printing. When I get these results, it’s very clearly overextrusion, when I look closer.
If it is overextrusion, there are many solutions, each with different side-effects. You can consider doing an extension rate calibritation, with the exact filament roll you are using. Or maybe simply adjust the extrusion rate down a little bit.
Hetzner works very well for me.


…as long as y’all use GenAI incorrectly.
It has it’s uses i programming. Doing all the coding for you is not one of them.


I’ll give you a hint: Originally it was *******.
Wait, let me try again - hunter2
I own my data. I own my installation. That’s what I care about.
Why would I want to own the hardware, when it’s in an inaccessible building far away.


Just to be clear: Do you want a way to save anything interesting that might happen, or do you want to save everything as automatically as possible?
I guessing that when it was falling over, part it got taller. (Think of a 199 cm tall cabinet in a 200 cm room. It can’t fall over, it will hit the ceiling.)
As it got taller, the nozzle could dig in.
As the nozzle got embedded in the plastic, the heat would melt some plastic, and the dirt would stock to the warm molten sticky platic.