Anyways. ABS contraction near the bed. It creates a "waist" within the first 4-8mm of height on cylindrical parts. Small parts of 12mm diameter, and parts 40mm diameter exhibiting this same bow profile from contraction. Right now I run my bed temp at 116°C with Kapton surface, MG black ABS, 241°C extrusion temp. If I run the bed at 110°, that 6° difference is all the difference between a first layer that bonds, and a first layer that sometimes pulls off. (An "O" shape ring gets strung into a "D" shape on layer 1, in other words.) So I'm sort of set with the 116° bed temp as it leads to 95% bonding success without monitoring the print starts.
I suspect the bow has to do with the temps near the bed being hotter, and creating a large temperature range in that area while printing.
I typically do not use 100% fill on anything. It's usually 10-30%. Here are some of my questions:
Will a higher % of infill cure this? I.E., 75%-100% on small parts that do not use much total filament?
How will perimeter outline counts affect this bow, is it better to use 3 perimeters vs 1, to help fight it?
Grid patterns?
Lastly, when I build my heated enclosure, will air temps in the chamber as high as 50-70°C help cure this with ABS? I almost assume the hotter the air, the more problem fixing I will achieve when printing parts with high contraction issues, since air is the only thing stealing temperature away while the height grows.
THANKS!