Send the filament back!
Seriously. Don't open the box so you can get a refund.
So I have converted some printers (and undone the conversion) and I have customers who are happy with the conversion. 3dsolex has a solution that works. At least for the left bowden.
The feeder itself is fine as is. The UM3/S3/S5 feeders can all work with 1.75 filament just fine as far as I remember. It's the hot end that can't deal. The filament will just come backup up out of the core at the same time as out the nozzle and make a mess inside the print core.
However 3dsolex has a special 1.75mm print core and they have changable nozzles (nice) so you can get from 0.1mm nozzles up to around 2mm (maybe? Maybe only 1.5mm? I forget).
But the solution isn't fantastic. You have to do some trickery with the bowden - it's a double bowden and the inner bowden goes down inside the print core so changing the print core involves removing the bowden (really only takes an extra 30 seconds but still).
More importantly the solution doesn't work so well on the right side so you have to do hack solutions to get it to work with 1.75 on the left and 3mm on the right core.
I know a guy who got it working on the right core using a special spring so that the right core can go up and down and the inner bowden can go up and down with the core but I'm not sure exactly where to get the right spring (you want 4mm O.D. spring with 2mm I.D. so the 1.75mm filament can pass throught the spring). And despite all this you have to do weird things with cura like shown above. Or you have to set the flow in cura to (2.85mm/1.75mm)^2 which is 265%. So you have to set the flow to 265% if you can't figure out how to get cura to realize the left core is using 1.75mm filament. Setting the flow to 265% has other repurcussions - the initial purge might under purge. Retractions might use the flow feature (although I think not). Minor things that aren't a show stopper but there are repurcussions.
And if instead you modify the S5 machine profile to accept 1.75mm filament and you upgrade Cura you will probably have to do all the modifications again.
SO MUCH EASIER to just use "3mm" or "2.85mm" filament. Sometimes people complain "I can't get than in 3mm". Well I always prove them wrong. Unless it's some obscure color, every material out there on the planet is available (usually from the same manufacturer) in both sizes. Every obscure material. One exception I suppose is prusament which is for prusa printers which is only 1.75mm.
BUT YOU CAN DO IT! Contact 3dsolex by email: sales@3dsolex.com. They will sell you a 1.75 printcore at no extra cost. The ONLY customer I know who did this permanently and for good reason did it because he makes his own filament and the 3mm filament was too brittle and cracks in the bowden but the 1.75mm filament works great. This is a very obscure filament made from Boron or something similar - I forget the details. It's a very very niche usage.
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danielalexander 0
Also curious about this.
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