Unless you changed filament type presets in your slicer, the only way the machine would know is if the spools were equipped with RFID tags and the printer has a matching reader. Bambu infamously does this but to my knowledge Elegoo does not.
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Bambu is infamous for that? I can’t be assed to tinker with settings and print a million times to get it right. The rfid stuff they do is a godsend for me and surprised others wouldn’t like it
It's a transparent attempt to lock you in to buying their filament. If you want to know how the community at large feels about this, just go to your favorite objects repository and see how many solutions people have developed for ripping the RFID tags out of the Bambu spools and integrating them into spools from other brands just to make the damn machine happy with it.
It really doesn't add any "godsending." It's not difficult to, when you stick a new spool of filament in the machine, tell your slicer what that spool was. It's not like you're changing spools every 30 seconds, especially if your machine has some manner of multi-spool box like the AMS or various other brands' versions of the same.
I couldn't have changed the settings because I thought it was PLA. I noticed that it moved the test strip, but thought it might be because they didn't want to always go to the same spot or something. Then the supports were acting kind of weird, so I really checked the specs and discovered I ordered the wrong filament.
I doubt it but do like the idea of an rfid standard that could transmit basic info and default settings to the printer from the spool.
I absolutely have no use Bambu's RFID tags. I need to change the settings anyway, so why bother with them at all. Thankfully I doubt there were will be any agreement to any kind of standard to allow such a thing anyway.
Well if you could change the settings once and have it stick this would be a good thing imo. Agree unlikely to standardize but Im not for gate-keeping for 3d printing and think this would help beginners and experts alike
I hope you mean 200 degrees celcius, I imagine it's hard to print at 200 F ;-)
Maybe you can get metallic sodium print filament.