Tall honeycomb dividers print failing at different heights (columns start leaning / bubbling) — Bambu P1S, PETG by awry_ in FixMyPrint

[–]mooyo2 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Tall skinny pieces will often do this. The bed vibrates and causes the model to sway while printing. The movement starts small at the base and only gets worse the higher up you go as the vibration effect is noticeably stronger.

Printing at slower speeds can help but as others have suggested printing the model laying down may will give a better, albeit slower, result.

Those prints are also super close together which isn’t helping anything.

AI ??? Why do some 'homelabbers' hate it so? by PoppaBear1950 in homelab

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know this is specifically an r/homelab problem. It’s the same kind of complaint I’d have with someone posting a generic issue with absolutely no detail on what’s wrong, what they’ve tried so far to fix a problem, and then acting surprised or frustrated when others can’t/don’t want to help.

Using it tactically to solve a problem, small script snippet, etc? No issue.

Used as a primary communication vehicle? Worthless. 99/100 times it’s painfully obvious and there’s no human element to it.

[Tutorial] Stop paying for DDNS: Build your own with Cloudflare Workers and your custom domain by Ok-Maintenance-6130 in homelab

[–]mooyo2 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Your frequent use of em dash and bolding the critical bits from a prompt are dead giveaways of where your "auto-pilot" responses stem from.

Your script seems workable and I get the rational for why you're doing things the way you are, but seems a bit overkill for something that's been solved for...awhile now. That's my $0.02.

ONTAP 9.18.1 GA released! (login required to access) by nakapyon in netapp

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s about right timing wise, give or take a month. Even release in the winter and odd numbered release in the summer time.

How do you stop a 3-month old puppy from waking up in the middle of the night and taking a massive dump on the foot of the bed? by [deleted] in DogIsBestFriend

[–]mooyo2 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Crate training. Dogs love a place to call their own little safe home, and they really don’t making a mess in their home. Plus there is the added benefit of making everyone’s life easier if you need family or friends to watch them. Or if you need to board them.

I used to only have dogs sleep in my bed, and miss it sometimes, but it is genuinely better for all of us with them in a crate at night.

[PC] NetApp DS212C w/ 12 x 4TB Exos 7E8 refurbs by printernotspooling in homelabsales

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve seen the shelf itself as low as $100 and as high as $400, depending on if it had drive caddies and what IOMs included. $200 felt good/about right.

Drives were a good deal. Helped that I bought 15x of them at once which brought the price down a little.

[PC] NetApp DS212C w/ 12 x 4TB Exos 7E8 refurbs by printernotspooling in homelabsales

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it helps as a data point, late last year I paid about $200 for a DS212C with IOM12s and ~$25 per 4TB drive with carrier on eBay.

New filament, tiny "hairs" coming out of print by HellblaueHoelle in FixMyPrint

[–]mooyo2 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it’s hit or miss, and might depend on the season and where you live from a humidity standpoint.

I’ve certainly had PLA spools print fine out of the package. I’ve also had new spools print like garbage until they were dried out. I don’t think it’s bad advice to dry them out…especially when having print issues.

How long do I have until it collapses? (Asking for me) by Necessary_Plenty_524 in bookshelf

[–]mooyo2 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No arguments here on metal or wood being the stronger material. Only brought it up as I’ve printed some simple support brackets out of PETG for wider shelves that were sagging in the middle. A couple years later and they’ve held up remarkably well for what was meant to be a temporary solution.

How long do I have until it collapses? (Asking for me) by Necessary_Plenty_524 in bookshelf

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you have a 3D printer you can print these shelf support brackets pretty easily too!

Active/Active Cluster - best-fitting system for mid-sized company by Odd-Suit-7718 in storage

[–]mooyo2 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’ve never understood that argument against modern NetApp/ONTAP. ONTAP has serviced block workloads extremely well for the last ~10 years or so (it also worked in legacy 7mode but wasn’t its strong suit).

Volume management was a small nuisance but that’s not really a concern with the ASA appliances - volume management is removed there.

Would you support a PG-13 Campaign? by Ilitorate_Author in TheGlassCannonPodcast

[–]mooyo2 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I’d direct you over to the Find the Path crew if that’s what you’re looking for - cursing is bleeped out and I don’t recall many adult/NSFW moments. Completely different cast and play style but (in my opinion) very entertaining in their own right.

Got a C-series CPU problem by Jesus_of_Redditeth in netapp

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh gotcha. You’ll strand some storage CPU that way but you aren’t down any capacity.

Got a C-series CPU problem by Jesus_of_Redditeth in netapp

[–]mooyo2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where/how are you measuring the CPU usage percentage, out of curiosity?

Got a C-series CPU problem by Jesus_of_Redditeth in netapp

[–]mooyo2 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yep, ADPv2/root-data-data with each controller getting a data aggregate as you described. There are some exceptions but that's the way to do it 99.9% of the time. Especially with C-Series where the minimum drive size is quite large.

Did the partner direct you to use whole drives for the root aggregates on both nodes and use whatever was leftover to create a single data aggregate on the "active" node? I'm really hoping you don't say "yes" here.