Extruder fail July 20, 2016 03:57AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 147 |
Re: Extruder fail July 20, 2016 07:18AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
Re: Extruder fail July 20, 2016 08:17AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 147 |
Quote
dmould
It will not have damaged the hobbed bolt, just clean the plastic dust off it with a toothbrush or similar. The bigger issue is why the filament stopped feeding in order to cause that. It could just have been a build-up of plastic dust clogging the hobbed bolt until it lost its grip, it could be that you are printing a bit too fast, maybe your cooling fan failed (causing the filament to melt too high up and jam) or it may be a blocked nozzle. In my experience if the nozzle was not blocked before the failure, it probably is now because you have had plastic cooking in the nozzle for hours, and every time that has happened to me the nozzle became blocked soon afterwards (though maybe that only happens with ABS). Clearing a blocked nozzle is a bit hit-and-miss (there are instructions for a couple of methods in the Wiki). I ended up buying a new nozzle. If you use the method of burning out the blockage in a gas flame, remember to take out the PTFE liner first, otherwise that will burn as well.
Dave
Re: Extruder fail July 20, 2016 03:38PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 14,682 |
Re: Extruder fail July 20, 2016 04:06PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 147 |
Quote
dc42
Part of the solution is to use the correct extruder motor current. If the nozzle gets obstructed temporarily, you want the current to be low enough that the extruder motor skips steps instead of grinding a notch into the filament.
Re: Extruder fail July 21, 2016 11:58AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 14,682 |
Re: Extruder fail July 21, 2016 03:27PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 147 |
Re: Extruder fail July 21, 2016 05:03PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 14,682 |