Given the symmetry of the Y-shape I'll conclude that the problem is not space but that the slicer somehow becomes confused in there.
Given the symmetry of the Y-shape I'll conclude that the problem is not space but that the slicer somehow becomes confused in there.
It also looks like its algorithm concludes "if I can't print BOTH of an inside perimeter pair, then I won't print either". It could instead reason "there's just room for one perimeter wall and so I'll squeeze it in". Then we could have 3 perimeter walls, which I've heard some people (and printer manuals) recommending for certain situations.
To expand on what I said in my first reply, the slicer is applying the in-fil pattern (in this case, a hexagonal design) onto a tee shaped area.....and there's bound to be a proportion of the area where nothing is put. In your case, on one out of three bits of the tee section. Its not a deficiency or bug in the software, its just the end result of it doing what its been set up to do.