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It has been circulating around for a couple of weeks already so if you are our hardcore fan, you have already tested it. If so, kudos to you 😉 But nevertheless, Slic3r Prusa Edition now includes Smooth Variable Layer Height and is bundled in 1.7.6 drivers with all the necessary settings for perfect prints. And even though the SVLH is the star of the show today, reworked, faster, better and easier to remove supports made it to this release too.

The idea to vary a layer height to improve the finish of sloping surfaces is certainly not new. A paper by Pandey, Reddy and Dhand 2003 gives an extensive overview of algorithms to vary the layer height to limit the surface roughness, Florens Wasserfall integrated automatic layer height into his experimental Slic3r in the year 2014 as a part of his diploma thesis and Autodesk has shown their flavour of the variable layer height algorithm during the last year.

You may ask why you need such a thing. The use case is simple. 3D printing is always about the quality versus the print time. Let’s take a sample object, in our case 200% scaled up 3D Hubs Marvin. With 0.2 mm layer height, print takes 1 hour and 50 minutes. The problem is, the top of Marvin head ends up with an ugly staircase effect. If we print him at 0.1 mm layer height, the top surface improves dramatically but this time the print length becomes double at 3 hours and 45 minutes. At 0.05 mm the time would raise even up to 8 hours.

Only if there would be a way how to combine these two, right? There is now! Just select the object in the Plater tab and hit Layer Editing in the top menu. Now you can “paint” the parts of the object you want to be more detailed, in our case the top of the head. By default, the green parts will be set to 0.07 mm gradually smoothing to the main selected layer height, in our case 0.2 mm. The smoothing is very important and is not present in any other FFF slicing software. Without it, the layer height jump is very visible and defeats the effect of smoother surfaces.

Take a look at the video we prepared to show off the capabilities. The tweaked g-code took 2 hours and 20 minutes, shaving the print time by 1 hour 25 minutes with the same result! We also used a little trick to speed it up a bit more with printing Marvin’s legs at 0.25 mm, highlighted in red on the model.

Simplify3D can emulate this with multiple processes, tedious manual setup and hideous visible jumps in layer height. Same applies in vanilla Slic3r with Layer option under object settings. I am very thrilled we were able to produce the first practical solution for FFF 3D printers with such stunning results.

Supports

New supports are not nearly as exciting, but everyday bread and butter of 3D printing. Most of the updates happened under the hood. Main focus was to rewrite supports to C++ to speed things up. This also made it more stable eliminating instances when on some object support generating never finished.

Supports are now generated on the grid, which also saves up time and significantly reduces the final g-code file size.

The rest

Small little addition is a “Slicing info” box appearing after the g-code is generated showing the amount of filament used and its cost.

Little work on parallelization was also done in this release but remains the main focus for the next release. This means SPEED 🙂

We continue to work on making the Slic3r Prusa Edition the best slicing engine and are happy for any feedback you send us.

You can download the preconfigured Slic3r Prusa Edition for Original Prusa i3 MK2 as part of our 1.7.6 drivers on our Drivers page.