

I can confirm it’s not the outlet, only because I’ve had a trip in a completely different room after moving the printer to test it.
I can confirm it’s not the outlet, only because I’ve had a trip in a completely different room after moving the printer to test it.
Is it plugged into a GFCI protected outlet?
Would this help? I’m currently using a standard 3-prong outlet with no ground fault protection, but I suppose I could install one on the given port…
There could just be too many devices with some earth leakage connected to the circuit, causing it to trip without any of them being faulty.
This could be, I suppose. Though what should someone do about this ultimately? I’ve already tried removing elements a piece at a time, but it would only work properly once the ender was off the circuit.
Ah, should note that I’m in the US. I’m also not on the 230V mode and I’m using the 115V power mode, which is standard for my region.
It’s stupid as hell to share any personal information with a company that is interested in spying on you and feeding your data to the nearest advertiser they can find.
Like seriously – are people using their brains or what?
The cable is an interesting point, as I haven’t tried a different cable. Since there’s a non-zero chance that it could be responsible, I’ll try switching it next time I plug it in. I suppose the cable they shipped me could be bad.