I'm not even sure exactly how many people have noticed this behavior. Since if you are doing a 'normal' amount of infill (35% or more kinda thing like so many people seem to do) .. you don't really notice since you see so much infill anyway. It's only when you are trying to do super-minimal still it...
Not even just sequential printing tho! Any printing of multiple parts at once. Since they would all be truly identical parts. Versus having 'random infill based upon where they were sitting on the build plate' as they do now.
I like most people end up clicking the skirt option when printing most things, just as a way to make sure that my extruder is primed properly. But sometimes the skirt is waaaay more than is really needed. Either it's a huge part, or a bunch of parts that all get outlined, etc. It would be nice to ha...
Hey there. I've found myself often highly modifying the infill angles/design/etc. In order to make some bigger prints that are properly supported, and yet require minimal material. IE: I'm often printing large 6"x8"x4" size models but where I only want to use 200g of material cause I'm making a ton ...
+1 - For exactly the same reasons. I've had to do this a number of times when I'm making a model with very little infill (or none) ... and then a surface needs made. But I don't want 'every 50 layers'. Just at layer 50