Yeah, well, that’s what happened to me.
Thanks to Steven, this problem was fixed in all of 30 seconds as I reformatted the SD card as a FAT 16!
Things I learned, usually the hard way, so you don’t have to!
Yeah, well, that’s what happened to me.
Thanks to Steven, this problem was fixed in all of 30 seconds as I reformatted the SD card as a FAT 16!
I learned a lot this morning! And now you don’t have to learn, as they say, the hard way.

UPDATE: DO NOT USE TILES!!! THEY WILL SHATTER! READ LATEST POST!
The bad news is this is my first clogged extruder. The good news is I have all the spare parts to whip up a new extruder, no problem. That means I can experiment with wild abandon! My backup plan is to slice and dice the PTFE insulator into washers.
Having drilled out most of the plastic clog from the barrel, it’s mostly empty. The PTFE is in pretty good shape with the threads intact, if a little worse for wear. My plan to get the remaining plastic out of the nozzle is to put the nozzle/barrel assembly into the large washer upside down and prop it up on some ceramic tiles.
My hope is that by applying a heat source to the nozzle the plastic will just drip/fall out. The suggestion for using a blow torch to clear out the barrel and nozzle comes from Rick Pollack / MakerGear. Thanks again Rick!
By the way, wicked Google Sketchup skillz, no?
The opto-endstops marked the very first parts I had to solder for this MakerBot. Not having soldering anything more complicated than two wires together, this was an adventure and learning experience. Here’s what I learned today:
I’ve assembled quite a lot of my MakerBot today. This entailed assembling and putting together the X axis stage, Y axis stage, pulleys, putting gears on stepper motors, mounting gears, putting in the slider rods, Z axis threaded rods, bolting on the motors, and assembling the two “dinos.”
Although I have the CupCake CNC Deluxe kit, there are still some parts and tools required. If you’re getting ready to build your own MakerBot, here’s what else you’d need to build everything in one go:
Painted my MakerBot lasercut wood parts (and plastic pulleys!) today. Here’s what I learned: