2 hours and 40 minutes to print that vase.
3d printers are too slow!
What you an entrepreneur?
For that I need 10 minutes lol. You have to use the settings tab in your slicer sir
What is speed? 30mm/s?
speed: 40mm/s
layer height was pretty thin
Looks like you have a pretty beefy machine, I bet you could kick that up to at least 60mm/s.
but what’s about the quality?
What kind of printer are you using, what material, what hotend temp, and what layer height are you printing with?
Have just printed several vases in PETG and a 250mm tall vase takes around 50 min. in vasemode ,but I use 1mm nozzle and 0.6 mm layer.
@Jan_erik_Halvorsen could you post a photo of the 250mm vase? Im curious what that looks like with that layer height.
@Jan_erik_Halvorsen really? only 50 mins for a 25cm tall vase??
What’s the trick? 
Here is a video of a Coke bottle I printed with 1mm nozzle.
https://plus.google.com/+JanerikHalvorsen0047/posts/c2zKF5H969e
@Jan_erik_Halvorsen Very awesome, it looks super sweet.
@Domenico_Montaruli The trick is thicker layers with larger nozzle. Thick layer lines are not a sign of bad quality, on the contrary. You may try a e3d v6 with volcano and you can print very fast.
In time you’ll get more comfortable and get better speeds. When you get more confidence in your bed level, you can dispense with the raft. You can probably set it faster too without sacrificing quality.
Here is a video where I used 1.5 mm nozzle and 1.2mm layer
https://plus.google.com/+JanerikHalvorsen0047/posts/3BKNgyhxDqa
I have done a bit of ceramic art, several years of classes in grade school and college. A kiln firing and annealing process takes far longer, in comparison. Having manually machined and worked around 5 axis cnc mill I estimate it would take a while to make something that size as well depending on material and feed rate to the cutter. I have taken years of classes in making prototypes in various methods, mocking the shape up in foam core would take a few hours to carefully cut out the material for clean edges.
I am not sure the concept of FDM taking a ‘long time to make things’ is valid. I bought into that thinking as well at first, but after a bit of first hand experience with it I am thinking the opposite, it’s about as fast a process as possible. I think 3d printing being slow is a media induced bias, something to complain about, but it’s not true in comparison to real examples of alternative production.
Run a Bowden extruder and a lighter bed and it would print significantly faster. Or delta…
Well it’s better than nothing.
