Activity 001: First Layer Calibration Lab¶
Activity ID: U1M4-ACT-001 Duration: 35 minutes Objective: Students will achieve a perfect first layer by performing live Z-offset adjustments and evaluating first-layer quality using standardized criteria. Group Size: 2-3 students per station Materials Cost: ~$1 (minimal PLA usage)
Overview¶
Students execute a first-layer calibration procedure, learning to recognize and correct the five states of Z-offset (too high, slightly high, perfect, slightly low, too low). They print a large single-layer calibration square and evaluate it against reference standards, developing the hands-on skill of live Z-adjustment.
Materials & Equipment Needed¶
- FDM 3D printer (one per group, pre-loaded with PLA)
- PLA filament (any color)
- First-layer calibration G-code file (75mm x 75mm single-layer square)
- Z-offset reference card (laminated, showing 5 states with photos)
- Digital calipers
- Scraper/spatula for part removal
- Evaluation worksheet
Instructions & Procedure¶
Phase 1: Printer Preparation (5 min) 1. Verify the printer is clean — remove any debris or filament from the build plate 2. Clean the build plate with isopropyl alcohol (90%+) and a lint-free cloth 3. Verify PLA filament is loaded and feeds freely from the spool 4. Record the current Z-offset value displayed in the printer menu
Phase 2: Baseline First Layer (10 min) 5. Load the calibration square G-code file onto the printer 6. Start the print and observe the first layer begin 7. DO NOT adjust anything during this first print — let it complete the single layer as-is 8. Once the single-layer square is complete, cancel the print (we only need one layer) 9. Allow the bed to cool for 2 minutes, then remove the calibration square 10. Evaluate the baseline square using the reference card: - Measure thickness with calipers (target: exactly 1 layer height, e.g., 0.20mm) - Check line bonding: do adjacent lines overlap slightly or have gaps? - Check transparency: is the square opaque (good) or translucent (too close)? - Check adhesion: did it stick well, or could it be removed too easily? 11. Record your baseline evaluation and current Z-offset on the worksheet
Phase 3: Iterative Z-Offset Adjustment (15 min) 12. Based on your baseline evaluation, determine the direction of Z-offset adjustment needed 13. Adjust the Z-offset by ONE increment: - If gaps/round lines: decrease Z-offset by 0.02mm (lower nozzle) - If translucent/scraping: increase Z-offset by 0.02mm (raise nozzle) - If close but not perfect: adjust by 0.01mm 14. Clean the bed again with IPA 15. Print another calibration square with the new Z-offset 16. Evaluate the new square using the same criteria 17. Repeat steps 12-16 until you achieve a "perfect" rating: - Lines slightly flattened with overlapping edges - Opaque appearance - Measured thickness within 0.02mm of target layer height - Strong adhesion (requires spatula to remove) 18. Document the final Z-offset value and the number of iterations required
Phase 4: Validation (5 min) 19. Print one final calibration square at your dialed-in Z-offset 20. Have your lab partner independently evaluate it against the reference card 21. If your partner rates it "perfect," record the final Z-offset as the calibrated value 22. Compare your final Z-offset with other groups — discuss why values differ between printers
Discussion Points¶
- Why does each printer require its own Z-offset calibration?
- How does bed surface condition (wear, cleanliness) affect first-layer adhesion?
- What environmental factors might cause the Z-offset to drift over time?
- How does first-layer quality affect the structural integrity of the complete print?
Expected Outcomes¶
- Students should achieve a calibrated Z-offset within 3-6 iterations
- Final calibration squares should measure within ±0.02mm of target layer height
- Students should demonstrate ability to read first-layer quality and determine correction direction
Assessment Rubric¶
| Criterion | Excellent (5) | Proficient (3) | Needs Improvement (1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calibration Accuracy | Perfect first layer achieved within 4 iterations | Acceptable first layer achieved within 6 iterations | Unable to achieve acceptable first layer or required >8 iterations |
| Diagnostic Skill | Correctly identified Z-offset direction on every iteration | Occasional incorrect direction choice | Frequently chose wrong adjustment direction |
| Documentation | Complete worksheet with measurements, photos, and observations for every iteration | Worksheet complete but missing some measurements | Incomplete worksheet or missing iterations |
| Peer Validation | Partner confirms "perfect" rating independently | Partner rates "acceptable" | Partner identifies remaining issues |
Safety Considerations¶
- Never touch the heated bed or nozzle during printing or within 5 minutes of heating
- Use the scraper/spatula at a shallow angle away from your body when removing prints
- Keep hands and loose clothing away from moving printer components
- Isopropyl alcohol is flammable — use in well-ventilated area, away from heated bed
Last Updated: 2026-03-19