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izzy

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Posts posted by izzy

  1. I lose my sence of smell and taste nearly 3 years ago due to the Flu, I have a small amount back about 8% but very limited and I can't necessarily identify some of the scents.

    I don't know what any of the printing smells like so I have to rely on my wife to say if anything smells bad or is too much.

  2. Cheers  guys, I tried my reel in the oven for 2 hours at 70C garnished with a little parsley...

    When I looked before butting it in I noticed a fair bit of cracking so I'll let it settle and see if it's only a small area effected or it's a write off.

  3. I have about 1/2 a reel of UM blue filament from when I purchased my machine last october (2014), I store my filaments, samples and loose 10m etc lengths in sealed plastic bags as supplied and then in a large "Really Usefully Box" .

    My UM blue is getting a bit brittle and keeps breaking as it comes off the reel.

    Does anybody have a simple solution to rejuvenate the filament? I quite like the UM blue so would still like to finish the reel and not waste it so any surgestions welcome,

    Cheers Izzy.

  4. I have different sample coils, small ones from ColorFabb and larger diameter from Faberdashery, not wanting to self plug but for a small sample length of 5m I use the filament  hook that the filament just runs over, works fine with under 10m

    https://www.youmagine.com/designs/dovetailed-mounting-system/embed

    For larger amounts I designed this assembly, you can make as many arms as you want or need, the first time I unpack a new loose spool I carefully load it on coil by coil, 5 minutes well spent, when finished with I use some little clips with loom bands to keep the spool together, my spool holder arms pivot allowing for easy loading and unloading of loose filament.

    Hope these are of help, Izzy

    https://www.youmagine.com/designs/comprehensive-filament-holder/embed

    https://www.youmagine.com/designs/taming-loose-filament/embed

    • Like 1
  5. reading back through the posts, i'm infavour of the socket and your printed torque wrench as there are a lot of people that over tighten things, lets face it brass is soft and if your using a stainless nozzle and over tighten it you have ruined a hot end.

    Im not saying that we would all do that but lets face it there are engineers out there that are only alowed to use safety scissors, and if they were to over tighten the nozzle on my machine and break it...

    If your spending the best part of 2K+ euros on a 3D printer and think about scrimping a few cents on some tools then your going to pay in the long run, have one less foamy non fat capuchino and buy the socket.

  6. Hi drofnas, You will still use the atomic method to clean out the head between material changes.

    The benefits of the Olson block is that you can easily and cheaply replace nozzles, if you want to print with ColorFabb XT-CF20 it will wear away the nozzle, so at least with the Olson block you can have a dedicated nozzle or even a stainless nozzle for it.

    Also you can try some different size nozzles, 0.3 allows to to print a lot smaller items, the Nozzles from 3Dsolex are great there is an improvement in the material flow and print quality, and the jet nozzle seems better still.

    Getting the Olson block is one upgrade you will not regret it's great, they also do an uprated heating element which again works well keeping the temperature of the printing head more stable. If getting the Olson block get an uprated heater at the same time.

    Another beauty of having seperate nozzles is that some materials leave a residue which can effect other materials, so you can have a seperate nozzle for say t-glass and flexi filaments.

  7. Does anybody have an accurate model of the bottom part of the print head?

    I don't fancy removing a small notch or two from my origional part so would rather print a modified replacement.

    The drawing on GitHub ia but poor, if nobody has an accurate drawing I'll strip mine apart to measure it.

    Also for the heat sink fan, the Sunon fan spec shows a mounting hole pitch of 20mm +- 0.3.

    On GitHub the drawing for the bottom plate is indicating that the pitch is 20.4mm.

    Unless the Drawing is from Ultimaker I'd stick with the 20mm as this is a std pitch for 25mmSQ fans

  8. Hi James,

    Just a quick question re the Heat Sink Fan Duct, How have you routed your wires for the fans and heaters?

    I printed off your Part but then made a modified part as I have my Cooling fans on a non standard Fan Duct that swivels on the rear Print head screws to allow very easy access to the nozzle (Design Work in Progress before i make available), but when fitted there is no room for the wires to exit as standard fit, did you modify the bottom plastic section of the UM2 Print Head to allow the wires to exit?

  9. I managed to get a half decent multimeter off of eBay or Amazon that also has a temperature probe (AideTek.com. VC99+), I noticed that some people were mentioning a variety of print temperatures so I used it to verify my set up that the UM2 display readout was accurate. It was also handy to check the temperature at various points on the print head unit.

    Running with the Olson block and with an uprated 35W heater my set up is running well.

  10. I agree with the other replies, a great little paper.

    Love the Hobbed gear and will be looking more into this, colud you also give more details a picture etc on your heatsink fan duct.

    I use Roberts feeder which I have offset from the back plate by 3mm and added a knurled head to the adjuster screw so that I can easily adjust the tension (all the bits on my page on YouMagine

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