$2 Aliexpress Knock-Off better than Original?

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @CNCKitchen
    @CNCKitchen  Год назад +179

    Power to the knockoffs or would you rather support the innovators?

    • @stupidpterodactyls
      @stupidpterodactyls Год назад +146

      Friendly competition lowers prices and encourages more innovation!
      Edit: I get that if the 'knockoff" is just straight up copying the design, with no benefits, and/or can make them significantly cheaper or quicker to make than anyone else can, it can lead to the knockoff becoming a monopoly and stifling creativity once again.
      The knockoff in question had changed around some ideas and ended up with a debatable improved end result.
      Nothing is black and white, there is always complexity with subjects around choice
      Thanks @@Hex for some of these ideas.

    • @LakeTile_Productions
      @LakeTile_Productions Год назад +30

      Both

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark Год назад +31

      You've got a pro-knockoff sponsor today.

    • @3d-obsession662
      @3d-obsession662 Год назад +16

      As long as it doesn't infringe on the patents yes. A lot of money, time and research goes into innovation. That should be protected.

    • @Trashalchemy
      @Trashalchemy Год назад +75

      The knockoffs are also innovators in this case.

  • @Richard.Andersson
    @Richard.Andersson Год назад +1266

    I just read the patent, it is probably not a coincidence that the copper block from Aliexpress did not have holes in it, it was instead 3 channels that were open on one side each. Probably because the patent specifically mentions holes. This could be another way to circumvent the patent.

    • @MegaMaking
      @MegaMaking Год назад +78

      remind me of a video vsauce trying to debate/explain how many holes a human has. the definition of hole is actually undefinable if they really want to get technical about it.

    • @Eluderatnight
      @Eluderatnight Год назад +75

      @@MegaMaking if you want lawyers to talk until they are blue in the face ask them to define "may"or "shall".

    • @teac117
      @teac117 Год назад +30

      And then Bondtech copies the sleeve in their HF design. "It's unpatented" the chorus cries. LOL :P

    • @neelkanthgovindji1173
      @neelkanthgovindji1173 Год назад +68

      Its not like china/Aliexpress cares about patents…

    • @michim162
      @michim162 Год назад +1

      @@Eluderatnight 🤣🤣🤣👍

  • @TomTheWise_
    @TomTheWise_ Год назад +1033

    This aliexpress type is probably like 100 times easier to manufacture than drilling 3 holes at an angle and at the smae times gets more heat into the inside.
    This design is simply superior on a value level.

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark Год назад +58

      And the wear resistant CHT is probably insert based for the same reason. Especially since tool steel is a lot harder to machine, with means when you cross holes you are far more likely to break the drill than when drilling C36000 leaded brass.

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark Год назад +15

      If I had to guess the copper in the clone is free machining too, like C14500 as pure copper is ridiculously difficult to drill due to its gummy nature.

    • @MegaMaking
      @MegaMaking Год назад +105

      cheaper and better which is actually a smarter design. the CHT hardened core nozzle came after these clones... so... in a way... bontech also benefits from stealing designs from the chinese

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark Год назад +12

      @@MegaMaking Maybe they tried drilling a solid nozzle and regretted it badly when the drill crossed into the first hole.

    • @EgorKaskader
      @EgorKaskader Год назад +5

      @@soundspark I would certainly hope they'd be well aware as to exactly what was going to happen the second the drill crossed into the previous channel, to be honest

  • @titter3648
    @titter3648 Год назад +396

    The insert approach is so much better from a production standpoint.

    • @DimaLegoFUN
      @DimaLegoFUN Год назад +6

      maybe you can have other inserts, like with 4 holes. or even 5 but smaller)

    • @Shocker99
      @Shocker99 Год назад +5

      Only because the standard nozzle and high nozzle are the same except for the insert. So the same item can be used for two products. Otherwise, making the holes in the insert is about about the same difficulty and time consuming as the Bondtech. The insert approach has a higher number of operations to produce.

    • @jaro6985
      @jaro6985 Год назад +14

      @@Shocker99 Making the holes in the bondtech is harder because they are at an angle. But yes, more ops, which doesn't directly mean harder.

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 Год назад +1

      @@DimaLegoFUN Since it gets the job done, and are $2.25 ea. delivered, one could say, sure, but would have to ask why, when it was shown to work just fine at higher flow rates than anyone currently could use (outside of a Bambu...)

    • @DimaLegoFUN
      @DimaLegoFUN Год назад +1

      @@brianmi40 i found them at 1.6$ with shipping)

  • @eulachonfish
    @eulachonfish Год назад +110

    The issues happening with retraction length remind me of when I ran a color-mixing hotend. Since due to the complex internal structure you aren't directly pulling the filament in and out, you're just changing the pressure in the chamber by pulling on the filament. Retracting too much will break the suction and allow the nozzle to drip again. I found smaller, slower retractions to work best with that hotend (Geeetech A10M stock hotend)

    • @yuxuanhuang3523
      @yuxuanhuang3523 Год назад +3

      I wonder whether the lose core moved and somehow let more molten material to drip through.

    • @andreaudio
      @andreaudio Год назад +2

      That completely makes sense

    • @jbrou123
      @jbrou123 Год назад +1

      Being a novice /hobbyist at 3D printing, I was confused when he said he LOWERED the extraction length to DECREASE stringing. I thought he had it backwards, but it was I that was wrong. Your explanation clearly explains the reasoning. Thanks.

    • @fuckutube65
      @fuckutube65 Год назад

      Thanks, I shall keep that in mind when I reactivate my old Diamond Hotend 3-way....

    • @radry100
      @radry100 9 месяцев назад

      Retraction always just changes the pressure inside and never actually pulls the filament out. The filament is molten at the tip, so you can't pull it out like you think.

  • @BigBlack81
    @BigBlack81 Год назад +295

    As usual, putting out the videos that aren't just flashy but deep testing lore. Solid.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Год назад +22

      I appreciate that!

    • @marcosdiaz5131
      @marcosdiaz5131 Год назад +1

      @@CNCKitchen You're the only creator i turn off my ad blocker for! Thanks for the videos hope to see more when you have the time.

  • @Harambe_
    @Harambe_ Год назад +343

    Personally I think its kind of crazy that what is essentially just some drilled holes can even be patented in the first place.

    • @3.2213
      @3.2213 Год назад

      Pattents are stupid they only hold back innovation. Bondtech makes things overpriced by there marketing department with overpriced products and buzzwords that do not deliver anything that someone can call real innovation. Let them waste money with there legal case and still lose market. I hope this company will go bankrupt next year cause they are toxic for the opensource community.

    • @Mr_Yod
      @Mr_Yod Год назад +30

      Well, in the case of CHT there IS some innovation (but then the chinese variant, or the Bondtech insert, isnt' itself a further innovation, so worthy of patent itself? =) ).
      What I find ludicrous is Slice Engineering's patent (pending): they basically patented a couple rods (that keep still the heatblock).
      I'm not usually against patents, when they make sense (and in the mosquito's case I find none).

    • @christoz77
      @christoz77 Год назад +42

      Most patents are bs and shouldn’t even be

    • @parafitality2730
      @parafitality2730 Год назад

      You can submit patents for anything (hence patent trolls - look up George B. Seldon), what matters is if you can defend it when it's contested.

    • @JugularFilmes
      @JugularFilmes Год назад +13

      It is about the idea not the holes.

  • @SoundShunter72
    @SoundShunter72 Год назад +57

    The insert is really clever, but the execution could be a little more refined. It wouldn't hurt to have chamfers on both ends to make install completely foolproof and to help with retracts, probably. I thought the insert would be too loose for transfer enough heat, but it looks like it works very well. Maybe copper expands more than brass so when the nozzle heats up the two parts fuse together nicely.

    • @exi
      @exi Год назад +10

      Heat expansion coefficients: Brass 18,5. Copper 17,0. So no, the insert will not expand into the brass. The absolute expansion if the insert (assuming it is 4mm wide) would be around 0,017 mm. Which would be a very good value for a press fit. However, looking at the pictures of the insert it is pretty clear that this kind of precision is not used in the manufacturing process. Also the body would need to be out of Invar to not expand away from the insert but Invar is a bad heat conducter. A good pressfit would be considered "attached" so the patent claims would match.

    • @dixieduffy7
      @dixieduffy7 Год назад

      @@exi Would the expansion of the brass pick up the slack here? Sure the OD of the copper wont expand so much but the ID of the brass will also get smaller.

    • @Michael-gi5ml
      @Michael-gi5ml Год назад +3

      ​@dixieduffy7 That's actually a fairly common misconception. When a ring shaped object thermally expands, it's somewhat reasonable to think that the ID would shrink as the material expands inwards. However, the ID and OD both expand.

    • @timhoover1416
      @timhoover1416 Год назад

      I'm guessing that the fit gets tighter when it heats up even though as explained the Thermal Expansion is slightly higher for brass. Here is the logic and I believe how it works. When a hoop expands, the length is the "circumference" that is getting the largest change so the diameter is changing at C = Pi x D (or D = C / Pi). This means the diameter is increasing at about 1/3 the rate of the circumference. For the insert, it is expanding outwards and therefore is growing faster than the nozzle.

    • @gv100_blitz
      @gv100_blitz 11 месяцев назад +1

      This assumes it’s 100% brass and 100% copper, with no alloying

  • @hughessay1372
    @hughessay1372 Год назад +19

    Thanks for testing this! The knockoff actually looks like a much better design. It *might* be supplied in 2 separate parts to circumvent the patent application thought I have not reviewed it personally. I'd be tempted to press the copper insert into the brass external nozzle to expand it radially and make even better contact with the inner walls. Also, nickel plating the copper may help avoid copper oxidation. Whether the patent is ultimately issued and depending on any actual claims allowed, the knockoff may be able to make a lot of money before/if the patent is issued. Interesting...

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta Год назад +7

    A tiny speck of 'hi-temp' or silver-bearing solder to secure the insert into the body would work wonders!
    Solder has good heat-transfer, so it might work even better!
    Cold pulls with this aren't even worth considering: I'd get a whole bunch of these nozzles, keep one for each type/color of filament.
    It seems like a good 'production' tool.

  • @ricokaboom_
    @ricokaboom_ Год назад +25

    I got cht clone from "high quality" manufacturer and it looks the same as this one. Insert was well... inserted. Yes it gives more flow, especially on 0.6 nozzle size. However flow control was worse for me. Linear advance test prints are inconclusive and looks like it should be a negative value, single wall prints with retractions usually have holes in perimeters... Stefan can you take a look at retractions and linear advance in more details? I asked a few people with the same nozzle and they agreed that flow increases but linear advance becomes harder as well as retracts.

    • @Nolano386
      @Nolano386 Год назад +6

      I would also like to see this. I tried a clone as well for a little while, and it worked but I also felt like flow control was bad. I didn't feel like doing real testing with it at the time so I swapped back to a regular nozzle but seeing that other people had a similar experience, I think I'll give it another shot soon and see what happens.

    • @twanheijkoop6753
      @twanheijkoop6753 Год назад

      Any chance the nozzle was from mellow?

    • @ricokaboom_
      @ricokaboom_ Год назад +1

      @@twanheijkoop6753 tsssss I haven't told you that :D

  • @MrAdrianjudy
    @MrAdrianjudy Год назад +11

    I bought a pack of 10 of these off of amazon for about $20 and they work great! I am able to run my ender 3 pro at nearly 90mm/s as opposed to the 30mm/s that I was running before to get a good print. I am having some problems with stringing, but it could also be that I upgraded to a .6mm nozzle too and am still working on getting everything dialed in, but there is a definite difference in extrusion speed! I even had to upgrade the extruder to a dual gear one so that it could keep up. great video!

  • @Altirix_
    @Altirix_ Год назад +69

    seems odd that the patent for CHT gets blocked yet slice can patent friggin spacers on a hotend

    • @hebijirik
      @hebijirik Год назад +40

      US patent office granted a US company a patent of figgin spacers. US patent office rejected a European company patent on nozzles. Why is this not very surprising to me? ;-)

    • @wachocs16
      @wachocs16 Год назад +12

      Patent systems a lot of times it's just stupid because it's arbitrary and subjective. Also, a lot of brands just patent better product that they are producing just to slow down innovation and competition (thus, maintaining their exact same product at high price with no changes)
      For me. If a patent is not really used by it's creator, it should revoke. And if another brand can create a better product using you patent as a base, it should not infringe
      Also, the people at the patent system don't know everything and they not are masters of EVERY matter in innovation. That's way you can't patent the wheel, or the internal combustion engine in it's whole. But they could patent a motion system, hotend configuration or filament management.......
      Removable extruder/nozzle are patented... it's insane

    • @adriansue8955
      @adriansue8955 Год назад +1

      patenting a hole vs patenting a donut

    • @bobert4522
      @bobert4522 Год назад +2

      ​@@hebijirik Comes down to having patent lawyers in whichever country knowing what they are doing. I wouldn't be surprised that slice has a good legal team to draft patents whereas the EU mfgs are just filing electronically.

    • @or3n_
      @or3n_ Год назад

      @@adriansue8955 in this case, the hole gets fucked

  • @stevehutchesson1321
    @stevehutchesson1321 Год назад +11

    The altenatives work fine, just don't drop the copper insert on a dark carpet. They perform a lot better in terms of flow rate than the standard Creality 0.4 nozzles. For whatever reason, the ones I have tested are prone to pick up PETG around the nozzle tip but that may just be a retraction setting. Great review that was very useful. 👀👍

    • @NilsKlarlund
      @NilsKlarlund Год назад +3

      In my experience, PETG does not print well at all with brass nozzles. I buff a stainless steel nozzle with 3M Polishing Paper before installing. Then I clean it vigorously with a melamine foam pad after each print. For some reason, none of the gurus have ever picked up on this problem with PETG (?). I'm wondering whether I can drop the inset into my E3D SS nozzle. (The cheap SS clones tend to have wrong dimensions - making the adhesion problem worse.)

  • @Cheeky_Goose
    @Cheeky_Goose Год назад +59

    I really like seeing these comparisons between the knockoffs and the genuines. Personally, I think patents are sometimes used to gatekeep innovations because they can be so vague that it stops others from attempting to make an improved version, but I really don't know if this particular knockoff is worth using. I certainly wouldn't consider it due to the questionable machining, but if it was of a higher quality I would consider it, because I'm just a hobbyist and $20+shipping is too much for a nozzle. Although I don't think these nozzles are designed for hobbyists anyways

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 Год назад +3

      Of course, even a low power magnifying glass will reveal the exact quality of machining you have in your hands, and at $2.25 ea., one of the most reasonable chances one could ever take to improve their flow rates.

    • @gushhnet
      @gushhnet Год назад +4

      @@brianmi40 The chatter marks in each of the three channels most likely won't be an issue but you could try making your own with a polished surface if you wanted to test out the difference. Also trying other materials for the insert even though we know copper is the ideal choice testing other materials wouldn't hurt. These are most likely made in two ways... By hand using a steel jig with the three entry points with a second op for the chamfering or (most likely) a small cnc lathe with a live tailstock / toolpost drill that performs the operations via indexing of the spindle and it goes drill > chamfer > next index. They wouldn't use a regular drill, instead a micro endmill would be the choice here to avoid the tool from wandering off specially since you have both a "grabby" material and also an interrupted cut.

    • @Axunen
      @Axunen Год назад

      Depending on a patent. They CAN be used for gatekeeping BUT for smaller manufacturers/inventors/businesses they are essential. Every one knows that a product can be copied and manufactured in China much faster and cheaper than anywhere else. Patent is there to help the ORIGINAL inventor to recoup the money and time they spent on R&D. You wouldn't want to put time and effort into something and then have a bigger business copy it and take all your business? Why would you ever invent something and put money into something that you are then basically donating?

  • @claws61821
    @claws61821 Год назад +26

    On the one hand, I freely applaud Solex for bringing this improvement over to mainstream 3d printing from the other industries that have already had it for decades, and would love to tell people to purchase the original CHT from them for that reason alone. Unfortunately, like with Slice Engineering and Apple, I cannot in good conscience support a company that manages to brazenly get away with unlawfully patenting concepts and designs that already exists in other fields or in the public domain (see: Prior Art), or even companies that try but fail to do that very same thing. As a result of this particular immoral business practice and even bearing in mind that Solex have to date proven, if not necessarily helpful in all ways, non-obstructive to lone individuals and famous figures such as Stefan manufacturing and testing similar designs for comparison purposes and private use, I find that the only recommendation my conscience allows is to tell people to purchase only the knockoffs unless and until Solex ceases to misuse the patenting system and limits such intellectual property grabs to actual original designs as both implicitly intended and explicitly laid out in international and most national patent laws.

    • @neelsg
      @neelsg Год назад +10

      Maybe it was different back when the patent law was first introduced, but today it seems clear that patents overall hinder innovation more than it encourages it

    • @davidelang
      @davidelang Год назад +8

      @@neelsg a patent is supposed to include all the information so that someone in the same field could use the patent to recreate the invention ("ordinarily skilled in the art")
      unfortunately, too many patents do not do so, and try to make such broad claims that it's not clear what they cover, let alone how to build it.
      because someone else is supposed to be able to follow the directions and build the invention, it's obvious that it should NOT prevent people from making their own version of it for testing, only preventing someone from selling (or I suppose a large company could mass manufacture something for internal use)
      patent and copyright maximalists have been pushing for a long time to make people think that they prevent anyone from doing anything similar, which is NOT what is supposed to be happening.

    • @neelsg
      @neelsg Год назад +5

      @@davidelang I understand how patents are supposed to work and what they are meant to achieve, but that is not the reality. Given how they are abused and how effectively corporations can use them to be anti-competitive, I just think we would be better off and have more innovation if those laws were scrapped altogether

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Год назад +3

      The even worse thing that happens a lot is when companies patent something, or buy a patent, to prevent a (likely superior) alternative competing with their existing products. Patents really need to have a "use-or-lose" aspect, say they last the existing 20 years if you're actually producing (or licensing) the design, but if you aren't actively producing, developing, or licensing the design, simply blocking it from being used, it becomes public domain in say 3 years.
      Another part of the Intellectual Property realm that needs overhaul is that software being covered by copyright doesn't make any sense anymore. When software began to be created, it was just dropped into copyright law which is meant to cover creative works, which I don't think software fits neatly into. That was probably what made the most sense at the time out of existing options, especially with early software that was mostly manually written. But software typically involves both functional aspects (how it works, "under the hood" aspects) that should be covered by a patent (in the same way a tool such as a hammer might be) and creative aspects (aesthetics, user interface, storyline of a game, etc) that would make sense as a copyright. Some software, such as CAD, or say a 3D printer slicer, is mostly the "functional" side, while a game might be more the "creative" side, but all software would have at least some of both, thus not fitting neatly into either a patent or copyright. So what really needs to happen is a new category specifically for software that isn't either, but covers both creative/aesthetic elements and functional elements. Though the reality is that I feel like IP-law isn't really used in software anyway, instead they incorporate other methods built into the product to prevent software being copied or used without a license.

  • @MrMartinSchou
    @MrMartinSchou Год назад +17

    Makes me wonder if the Aliexpress version could be improved if the insert was threaded into the outer part (which would also be threaded). It'd give a higher surface area for heat transfer into the insert, and it might fix the stringing issue you mentioned with retraction.

    • @OneHappyCrazyPerson
      @OneHappyCrazyPerson Год назад

      That in an hardend steel nozzle and il be happy for a couple of bucks

    • @JugularFilmes
      @JugularFilmes Год назад

      best cooment, yours

    • @warel5730
      @warel5730 Год назад +2

      This could backfire due to filament sticking in the threads and also filament change would be interresting
      Might be executed with full core, not "open" to the sides but still there must be atleast a little thread left exposed at the end of the channel.

  • @wbhandy
    @wbhandy Год назад +11

    I wonder if the knockoff is more difficult to purge? Like switching from black to white filament, wonder if you’d get bits of black coming out of the cracks inside the nozzle halfway thru the next print

  • @91DevilDriver91
    @91DevilDriver91 Год назад +3

    I can imagine that the stringing with high retraction values occurs because you actually lift up the copper insert inside the nozzle but gravity drops it down instantly and pushes out a bit of material.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Год назад

      Sounds plausible. The next step in this evolution (from one-piece that is difficult to manufacture, to two-piece that has the loose part but is easy to manufacture) would be the two-piece design but as an interference fit, and the insert pressed in rather than loose.

  • @taitano12
    @taitano12 Год назад +17

    You can clean out the chips with a micro drill bit. Also, between the straight holes and copper being much softer than the brass, it would wear out faster. But the difference in wear is low enough to be WELL worth the price difference. It will wear out between two and four times as fast, depending on the material used, but it costs just 1/10 as much. How ever you break it down, you're money ahead, and in cases like mine, you can recycle the nozzle into something else. Just more brass for the crucible, AFAIC.

    • @louisvaught2495
      @louisvaught2495 Год назад +2

      It honestly might be worth nickel plating it yourself if you've got the setup to do that.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Год назад +4

      I doubt the insert wearing would be the limiting factor on nozzle life anyway, the nozzle orifice would be. For one thing, I would imagine wear happens fastest at the orifice, the smallest part that material is shoved through at high speed against the wall. Plastic more slowly oozing past the heat exchanger insert won't wear it so quickly. For another, the nozzle orifice has critical dimensions for print quality. 0.1mm worn off the surface (making the nozzle 0.2mm larger) and not having the desired dimensions will cause print quality problems. 0.1mm worn off the heat exchanger insert probably wouldn't make any notable difference whatsoever. These reasons are why ruby-tip nozzles have the ruby just at the nozzle orifice, the rest of the nozzle is the usual brass. So even with the insert a softer material, the nozzle will probably be "dead" due to the orifice wearing out before wear on the copper insert is a problem at all. Perhaps this was something the designer of this insert considered.

    • @taitano12
      @taitano12 Год назад +1

      @@louisvaught2495 Meh. Maybe. If I had the setup for that, I probably wouldn't. For me, anyway, it would be better to just get new of the superior knockoffs and recycle the worn-out nozzles. As Quill mentions, the hole in tip would wear out faster than the insert.

    • @louisvaught2495
      @louisvaught2495 Год назад

      @@taitano12 It may be less complex and difficult than you're thinking. If you have the fluid on hand, electroplating takes a 9-volt battery, a nickel plate, and some patience.
      Also, you can electroplate the whole thing at once. A thin layer wouldn't mess with the dimensional accuracy of the nozzle much, but could decrease wear by about an order of magnitude.

  • @Richard.Andersson
    @Richard.Andersson Год назад +10

    After thinking for a while, its highly unlikely that the patent would stand in court. Very similar hole-structures are used in almost every plastic extruder and it's called the "breaker plate".
    The only marginally new thing here is that it is built into a nozzle and not a separate part... but the aliexpress one is a separate part so even more similar to the old and proven breaker plate.

    • @adriansue8955
      @adriansue8955 Год назад +1

      plus there's all the kids play-dough pasta maker machines
      can't patent prior art

    • @DrN4b0
      @DrN4b0 Год назад +1

      I even got a heatgluegun with such a breakerplate.

    • @tomhsia4354
      @tomhsia4354 Год назад

      Slice engineering has a patent over spacers in a hotend to support the heater block.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Год назад +4

    It seems that you could sharpen the copper blade with a fine file if you want. As an alternative, you could hammer the copper part into the brass injector to make the heat transfer even more effective thanks to tighter connection.

  • @accumall3027
    @accumall3027 Год назад +7

    From the heat map in "1:21", it seems obvious that there will be a huge improvement on layer adhesion with CHT nozzle. Will you test that as well?

  • @jawaligt
    @jawaligt Год назад +3

    I can get up to 39 mm3/s (at 1% underextrusion) with a clone V6 CHT + volcano adaptor in my clone volcano with an Orbiter 2.0 extruder. This really is some excellent performance.
    It also means that there's still a lot of life left in older hotend designs such as the volcano. No need to switch to a Dragon or other fancy new thing as long as your extruder is able to support it.

  • @86abaile
    @86abaile Год назад +13

    I bought the bondtech nozzle immediately after you showcased it and I've been very happy with it. As for which one I'd choose, having seen that metal flake ready to fall off and block the nozzle I'd definitely avoid it. I don't mind the design, but I'd rather go with a brand name part for something in the melt path just for piece of mind. The melt path is critical, so it pays to spend a little extra, unlike the extruder where a knock off is often good enough. The price of the bond tech nozzle is not exactly expensive and unlike my early 3d printing days where I'd buy a large pack of cheap chinese mk8 nozzles for my CR10 and just throw them away if they ever blocked; these days I tend to only use my 3D printer for more important functional parts, so I take much greater care of my printer and its setup, use the right nozzle for the job and do everything I can to avoid blockages (filament cleaners really should come as standard on printers).

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 Год назад +3

      It's 7 TIMES as expensive or depending on pricing on Aliexpress at the moment, and surely you would agree that the chances of seeing a burr like that from manufacturing more than rarely will quickly show up in reviews. Since I, and many, print with .6mm nozzles, I've never once had any get blocked.
      Regardless, the pressure on Bondtech now would seem likely to cause them to reduce their price somewhat since any machinist could tell you that their price for those materials and machining make them highly profitable.

    • @gkolesnitsky
      @gkolesnitsky Год назад

      @@brianmi40 I think that if bondtech decided to make a newer nozzle that used a similar design to the aliexpress model and improved on it like making a coated version or making the bores more heat efficent it would have a leg up on the aliexpress models and people would trust it.

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 Год назад

      @@gkolesnitsky I don't think the issue is trust. It was shown to work fine, and at rates that exceed the ability of most printers to utilize, unless you are using large nozzles like a 1mm.
      I just see most people don't need anywhere near these flow rates with a stock .4mm or or upgraded to a .6mm nozzle.
      However, at $2 now instead of $17, it's a strong invitation to play around with one.
      I run a .8mm on one of my Anycubic Mega X's for making small to medium storage boxes, but I'm fine with the stock flow rates so don't really have a burning need, but at $2 may give it a play to see if I can push it a bit.

  • @wktodd
    @wktodd Год назад +7

    It is not a knock off, it is an improvement. It is a better design , if not a better product, than the cht.

  • @LaurenceGough
    @LaurenceGough Год назад +5

    Great idea, I wonder if we can drill out already existing nozzles, I have some unusual length ones where the insert would be good for!
    One thing not mentioned here is the CHT nozzle is coated, the cheap one is not.

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 Год назад

      As another said, there are nickel coated knockoffs available also... Pretty much anything that works becomes a magnet for a knockoff, which, is as it should be...

  • @andrewesquivel
    @andrewesquivel Год назад +3

    I have a clone.
    What's interesting is that I was able to print abs at pla temperatures. At proper abs Temps, I can print my 1mm bore stuff very fast compared to a standard nozzle

    • @dtibor5903
      @dtibor5903 Год назад

      Depends which ABS. For me abs works from 220-235C, using volcano hotend.

    • @flaviolimaj
      @flaviolimaj Год назад

      That's quite interesting. So what sort of nozzle were you using exactly?

  • @someoneelse7629
    @someoneelse7629 Год назад +2

    In your video a year ago where you try to make a hi flow nozzle, I suggest exactly this in the comments, a loose slug, but I think I suggested a press fit. Nice that it works, more cheap parts to the community!

  • @jonathanwagner4600
    @jonathanwagner4600 Год назад +3

    I think the copper insert is a better idea. I think having it be removable would make it easier to clean the nozzle if you had a bad clog. I cant imagine you could do cold pulls on the original, you could in theory have an insert with a single hole that would allow you to still do cold pulls potentially like if you had some junk at the very tip.

    • @warel5730
      @warel5730 Год назад +1

      Insert with a single hole is the original nozzle isnt it? Like it wouldnt have the thermal properties anymore.

  • @diegovd7215
    @diegovd7215 Год назад +9

    Hallo Stefan, thank you for the test. I wish you had tested 'what happens when you change filaments': can you successfully change to a different color filament without having remains of the other color suddenly appear in the new print? Meaning, when you put a new filament, are we sure that all three channels will be purged from the old filament fully? Danke und schöne Festtage

    • @wiktorpp
      @wiktorpp Год назад

      I wonder that too. Cold pulling would probably not work. I do want to buy one, so I'll try it out myself

    • @jaro6985
      @jaro6985 Год назад

      You change filament, then purge until the color changes fully to the new color. Its no different from a normal nozzle.

    • @no-page
      @no-page Год назад

      @@wiktorpp If you watched the video, you would know Stefan said cold pulling did not work with the knockoff nozzle.

    • @wiktorpp
      @wiktorpp Год назад

      @@no-page Oh. I missed that. Thank you

  • @HotboiEngineering
    @HotboiEngineering Год назад +24

    I’m personally waiting on the wear resistant CHTs, I hate limiting what I can print.

  • @3dexperiments
    @3dexperiments Год назад +20

    If the Bondtech wear resistant nozzles get good reviews, I will be putting them on all my machines. I have bought Chinese knock off CHT nozzles and they are functioning well as the insert is firmly attached to the nozzle. That served as a cheap experiment and now that I know this is a proven design, I'm happy to pay for the real thing.

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj Год назад +3

      Same as I did with the BL-Touch. Got the clone from Trianglelabs 1st, saw how it performs on my setup, can't go back to manual now and after it eventually broke (...no idea how a diode on it's board simply blew up. There's a hole in it...), I got the original Antclabs one.
      One can make the argument on games/movies/music as well making new fans through _unofficial_ means. Few are wiling to try out with big buck.

    • @WeedleTomato
      @WeedleTomato Год назад

      Any real experience with engineering composites, like CF Nylon? Filament manufacturers tends to recommend at least 0.6 nozzles for them, so I wonder if they are more prone to nozzle clogging or not.

    • @3dexperiments
      @3dexperiments Год назад +1

      @@WeedleTomato That's an excellent point. I am standardizing on 0.6 for all my printers with the Bondtech CHT nozzles but I haven't printed any CF Nylon yet. That's a good question for Bondtech.

    • @specialingu
      @specialingu Год назад

      @@WeedleTomato i recently clogged a .4mm cht with marble filament (light grey pla with black flakes) so it could be more suseptible to chunks...i just swapped nozzle and the filament, and havent prodded the cht nozzle yet

    • @fluxcapacitor
      @fluxcapacitor Год назад

      I don't understand the logic behind your point. Let's consider the reverse with the exact same logical steps. If the Chinese knock-off had proven otherwise, i.e. to be junk while the original was excellent (but you didn't know that, cause never tested) you would have stopped considering them equally bad?

  • @WeedleTomato
    @WeedleTomato Год назад +5

    Any plans to try this nozzles on hotends like Dragon HF and Rapido UHF?

  • @Akela7_7
    @Akela7_7 Год назад +1

    For best result you must solder copper thing inside nozzle

  • @WeedleTomato
    @WeedleTomato Год назад +6

    Wow, that's what I need right now! I'm not able to order genuine CHT for some reason, so I'm waiting that replica from aliexpress. Will see if it will work for me.

  • @VolkanTaninmis
    @VolkanTaninmis Год назад +9

    I have been using full metal hotends + nozzles + other stuff more than 3 years now. From AliExpress and local shops.
    Yes premiums are nice but if you have understanding on electronic + mechanics you can have killer machine 1/10 of prices.

    • @VolkanTaninmis
      @VolkanTaninmis Год назад +1

      @@WhiteG60 I agree with you. Even the 3d print services don't have this "hurry"
      3d printing world poisoning with biased reviews and total unnecessary products for unrealistic need in real world.

  • @lackinggravitas6751
    @lackinggravitas6751 Год назад +5

    It'd be interesting to see if it's possible to improve performance by soldering the insert in.

  • @SneakyJoeRu
    @SneakyJoeRu Год назад

    I ordered those nozzles a month ago with 0.6mm holes to somehow improve speeds of printing for my cheapass bowden tube printer. Right now printing first benchy and hope it won't fail miserably. It's the fastest print I'm ever doing and first time doing 0.6mm nozzle.

  • @woodcat7180
    @woodcat7180 Год назад +5

    Patent laws in their current state are broken. Remember Apple vs Samsung and rounded corners?

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage Год назад

    I wonder if chamfering the edges of the insert a bit more to get a sharper edge would help it perform even better.

  • @tomhsia4354
    @tomhsia4354 Год назад +1

    One big advantage the knock-offs have over the CHT is the ability to use them in hardened steel, ruby, or tungsten carbide nozzles.

    • @jaro6985
      @jaro6985 Год назад

      You can't do that though.. without machining hardened material which is a lot of work.

    • @tomhsia4354
      @tomhsia4354 Год назад +2

      @@jaro6985 Which is why the insert approach used by the "knock-offs" make sense for those hardened nozzles. The insert does not have to be made from a really hard material since most of the wear should occur at the tip.
      You can make a multi piece nozzle, with each piece made from a different material. A copper alloy body with high thermal conductivity, a tungsten carbide tip, and an insert made from a somewhat harder copper alloy or steel. A one-piece wear resistant CHT nozzle would be a nightmare to make. Even the official Bondtech wear resistant CHT nozzle uses inserts.

  • @IrocZIV
    @IrocZIV Год назад +4

    Like with most things, I think if you have money, you should buy the original, but if cash is tight going with the 'knock-off' is ok. Especially in this case, as it is pretty different.

    • @ColHogan-zg2pc
      @ColHogan-zg2pc Год назад

      If I like the performance of the AliExpress one that's where my money goes

  • @AdityaMehendale
    @AdityaMehendale Год назад +1

    Additional improvement idea: Outside threads on the copper part and inside threads on the brass part. Larger area for heat-transfer, and better contact due to thread-preload. 11:42

    • @shadyb
      @shadyb Год назад +2

      If you look at threads cross section, you'll notice that threads have very limited contact points. Best approach is to press fit insert very tightly, like bondtech does with volcano CHT. It's hard to do at home though. Not impossible but requires some tools

    • @AdityaMehendale
      @AdityaMehendale Год назад

      @@shadyb Makes sense - nonetheless, it shall be significantly more than a cylindrical fit. Note also that the two materials being dissimilar, any pre-tension shall help to maintain contact in spite of temperature-change. A conical (instead of cylindrical) fit may also be worth considering, provided preload can be appropriately applied. I wonder if solder (in its molten state) may be functional as a conformal gap-filler at printing temperatures (~220*C)

  • @matwyder4187
    @matwyder4187 Год назад +3

    Personally I think patenting 3 holes drilled in a threaded rod is at least at the brink of patent trolling. Why stop here, why not go for a single hole? Or the mere idea of increasing heat transfer by enlarging the contact area. Oh, of course they already did it :) Selling a nozzle for 20 bucks is just ridiculous, as long as it doesn't include some special manufacturing method or basically anything that would justify the extreme price point.

    • @twanheijkoop6753
      @twanheijkoop6753 Год назад

      Well before the clones came out it did exactly that, it is harder to manufacture and it gives a flow rate increase. I'd say without knowing that the clones exist the cht nozzle is still quite impressive

  • @Craftlngo
    @Craftlngo Год назад +1

    the thermal expansion of Copper and Brass are (slightly) different. The loose insert can get press fit in the Brass Nozle at working temperatures. I would call this a smart design decision

  • @poster99999999
    @poster99999999 Год назад +3

    Great comparison, balancing the technical with a practical

  • @sofronio.
    @sofronio. Год назад +2

    there are different versions of cht copy nozzles in China. and a nearly full copy one is there, and even more a nickel plated one. but after watching this video I'm quite happy with the one you showed in the video.

  • @petermaersk-moller3014
    @petermaersk-moller3014 Год назад +12

    Hi Stefan. Thanks for as always a very good video. I have also tested the CHT clone and found when it works and when it does not work well. I tested it on an Ender 3 V2 bowden tube fed MK8 hotend with an all-metal heatbreak and a Voron with Afterburner, DirectDrive and Dragon HF. On the MK8 hotend, I saw performance drop of flow for the CHT clone of 10-15% while on the Dragon HF I saw performance increase of flow for the CHT clone in the order of 25-35%. I have posted links to data graphs, but apparently it got deleted. Anyway the conclusion is that the bowden fed MK8 hotend cannot as easily push filament through the nozzle compared to a standard nozzle because, the filament upon arrival at the nozzle split is cold and to difficult to split and bowden system not powerful enough to press through hence resulting in lower performance. On the Dragon HF with direct Drive, the HF part of the hotend esily soften the filament before it arrives at the split and the Direct Drive easily pushes the filament through. That is the explanation why the CHT clone works very well for some and not at all for others. Data on graphs available in the video here ruclips.net/video/HypllFpZkXM/видео.html

    • @petermaersk-moller3014
      @petermaersk-moller3014 Год назад

      @@piisfun Yeps, they were deleted again. Posted again and deleted again. Or it could be Stefan deleting comments although I find that unlikely. ANd I can't post pictures here in the comments. So no data.

    • @petermaersk-moller3014
      @petermaersk-moller3014 Год назад

      @@piisfun So the only thing to do is to make a RUclips video with the data graphs. ruclips.net/video/HypllFpZkXM/видео.html

  • @BeFree0_0
    @BeFree0_0 Год назад +2

    If someone sends you a second one you should drill out a volcano nozzle and put 2 of those brass inserts into, you may need to braze or solder them together so they don't miss align though

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark Год назад +1

      I'd say braze because common solders melt at common 3D printing temperatures.

    • @BeFree0_0
      @BeFree0_0 Год назад

      @@wyattutz I know he mentioned them in one of his videos

  • @denismilic1878
    @denismilic1878 Год назад +3

    The simple solution for patent infringement is selling nozzle and insert separately.

    • @anderslagerqvist2642
      @anderslagerqvist2642 Год назад

      Feels like a bigger innovation than to simply increase heat transfer area, even I had the same idea.
      But making the production efficient that requires some thought.

  • @jaaxxone
    @jaaxxone 26 дней назад +1

    FYI UPDATE - It appears that all the "CHT" knockoff have been removed from Ali. You are very hard pressed to see pics of the nozzle entrance and "CHT" has been purged from the descriptions. However, The same vendors are selling "High Speed" nozzles that appear to have a *single* hole copper colored insert. These are the new knockoffs. Just got some today. They still have the 3 way split, but it happens lower in the nozzle. Really weird everything went away almost overnight, you don't see that happen often overseas.

    • @easyluckable
      @easyluckable 18 дней назад

      Yeah, I know. I just got a CHT clone like 3 weeks ago and I searched last week, all the listing are gone, except few ones are selling for $15 for each. I wonder what happened, because it’s still really easy to find cht clone on taobao.

  • @PrintingPerspective
    @PrintingPerspective Год назад +7

    Well, shi... I had the same testing idea ;D Great video BTW. Honestly, I am surprised by well the knockoff performed. I have one too but mine seems to have a bigger "blockage" in the middle. And because there are only two trusted sellers on Ali (that I know), anything else is a gamble, like all these CHT clones.
    Looking at this situation from a business standpoint, you don't want that someone would rip off your great design but from an enthusiast standpoint, you want more innovation and those patents just slow them down. It is only from what point of view you are looking I guess.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Год назад +1

      That's sort of the debate with these rip-offs. The rip-offs discourage R&D investment if someone knows their design could be ripped off and sold for 1/10th the price. But the rip offs make it more affordable, bringing 3D printing within reach of hobbyists, and forcing companies to innovate to make products stand out and be affordable, and making there be a market for them to sell to in the first place. In this case I feel like the "rip off" contributed greatly to the design - they took an effective but expensive-to-manufacture design and found a way to produce it at far lower cost with comparable performance.

    • @warel5730
      @warel5730 Год назад

      ​@@quillmaurer6563 I think its sort of balance issue:
      if the patent owner asks orbital prices for it, it doesnt get used and ppl just wait for it to expire like with many great ideas in the past.
      If you dont protect R&D properly, ppl get discouraged from doing the R&D in first place, because others can just take the results without paying for the effort and investment.
      But if prices for the patents are reasonable, it actually gets used as well as motivating ppl to do R&D. Atleast thats my feeling about it.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Год назад

      @@warel5730 The point you're saying is that patent-holders need to offer their design at a reasonable price in order for it to make money, serve the community, and not lose out to rip-offs? Makes sense. Though it is somewhat fair for them to need to make back their R&D costs, which rip-offs don't need to. But if they make it cheap enough and sell enough volume they should still be able to.

  • @PekkaKeränen-o3s
    @PekkaKeränen-o3s Год назад

    check and straighten the head by sanding, heat will not transfer if it is not flush with the spacer, heat will transfer through the flat surface in addition to the thread.

  • @thenextlayer
    @thenextlayer Год назад +5

    Lol DUUUDE I was going to do this EXACT video! But I'm glad you did it, because you are much better at the scientific method :)

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Год назад +5

      Go ahead! I'd love to know what the results from others are.

    • @supercurioTube
      @supercurioTube Год назад +3

      I'll gladly watch a second video on the topic 😀

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Год назад +2

      Do it, take a different spin on it. Something with retractions. Something with a printer where PTFE butts up against the nozzle and the insert can wander into the PTFE. Something about longer term use.

  • @GregAtlas
    @GregAtlas Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video. I'd still love to see you test out the different wattage heater cartridges in a regular block and a volcano block to see how much they might make a difference in melting capabilities.

  • @shadyb
    @shadyb Год назад +4

    From my experiments, copper volcano nozzle (nickel plated) has similar performance as CHT volcano.
    But it makes me wonder if at some point extruder makes more difference than the nozzle.

    • @Technikfreak72
      @Technikfreak72 Год назад

      I would like to see how a plated copper CHT nozzle would perform 😊

    • @shadyb
      @shadyb Год назад

      @@Technikfreak72 exactly the same. Nickel plating is very thin and doesn't make any difference (at least not any positive difference because nickel has worse thermal conductivity than copper)

    • @jaro6985
      @jaro6985 Год назад +2

      @@shadyb Their point was the entire nozzle made from copper, instead of brass, nothing to do with the nickel plating. But yea, from what I've read performance difference between copper/aluminum/brass doesn't seem to be much.

    • @shadyb
      @shadyb Год назад

      @@jaro6985 in my case insert made of copper so this is where it comes from

  • @BairdBanko
    @BairdBanko Год назад +1

    wow i was just looking at buying a high flow nozzle, and went to your channel to look at your previous videos. Great timing!

  • @or3n_
    @or3n_ Год назад +3

    I think this design exists in other fields already so tell me how the hell did they get a paptent for it? I very much dislike companies that abuse patents and stifle an industry, so I will be buying the cheap knockoff.

  • @yvan2563
    @yvan2563 Год назад

    Everybody is talking about faster printing speeds, but I see this new type of nozzle as a way of allowing the use of smaller/lighter stepper motors for direct drive setups.

  • @DragonGunzs
    @DragonGunzs Год назад +4

    I actually just started testing the aliexpress nozzle and so far im very impressed, i havent been able to fail a print yet, going over 250mm/s on speed.

    • @alexandrevaliquette1941
      @alexandrevaliquette1941 Год назад +2

      Keep going; If you try hard enough, you will eventually fail.
      Love from Montréal

    • @foldionepapyrus3441
      @foldionepapyrus3441 Год назад

      And let us know how well it holds up - that copper insert aught to be much softer than the bondtech design so it may well abrade quite quickly in comparison - though the filament you print will define if that matters much to you.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Год назад

      @@foldionepapyrus3441 The loss of material might not matter much? i mean what is hurt by that upper edge rounding over?

    • @foldionepapyrus3441
      @foldionepapyrus3441 Год назад

      @@SianaGearz Depends on what rate it is lost and where - too fast and it might shed lumps that will block the nozzle, it is in the end going to interfere with it delivering heat to the filament too.
      And as it doesn't really have any great cutting edge when new it may just stop feeding altogether especially against the higher temp or tougher filament - plastic not soft enough so it starts skipping before the filament really get into the multi channel melt zone proper.

    • @DragonGunzs
      @DragonGunzs Год назад +2

      @@alexandrevaliquette1941 Update: so i uh... failed at failing. I started experiencing hardware limits on multiple parts of the printer before under extrusion caused a failed print. The hardware of my ender 3 v2 could not keep up with the nozzle! At least on a benchy.

  • @edwardbarton1680
    @edwardbarton1680 Год назад +1

    The insert design could likely be improved by having a slight taper, matched with a slight taper on the cavity. That would ensure a tight fit, and improve heat transfer.

    • @nicolasmedina2978
      @nicolasmedina2978 Год назад

      i was thinking that he could just put silver solder to thermally join better the parts

  • @Avrution
    @Avrution Год назад +4

    Bring on the high flow volcano knockoffs. Looked into buying the genuine from CHT, but I prefer avoiding giving my money to places that up-charge me to use a credit card or paypal.

    • @johnandrews9433
      @johnandrews9433 Год назад

      Lol and you think you aren’t getting up charged for PayPal on AliExpress? Or that you aren’t paying for it in the form of a higher price? Get over yourself lmao, if you’re not getting a cash discount everybody is getting up charged for the transaction fee you fucking clown

    • @NeoIsrafil
      @NeoIsrafil Год назад

      Honestly, agreed. I will support the original until the moment the original is trying to rip you off at like 10 times the price. 20 dollars is unacceptable for a nozzle... 2 dollars each is frankly pretty pricy too, I get 10 of em for like 10 bucks on amazon, but 20 is insane for ONE nozzle.

  • @adnlan90
    @adnlan90 Год назад

    I received mine and they are ultra clean, the machining is really great and sincerely the impression with them is much better.
    There is no stain on the materials of the nozzle.

  • @marsgizmo
    @marsgizmo Год назад +8

    this is pretty interesting! great video! 👏

    • @pokimepikac7389
      @pokimepikac7389 10 месяцев назад

      i sometimes think you're a bot bro. also print something other than a figure

  • @sypernova6969
    @sypernova6969 Год назад +1

    I bought two; a 0.6 and a 0.4. after tests, on my sovol sv06 using cura and my own test, I was onlly able to achieve 18.5mm3/s with both nozzle. I suspect that maybe the printer has something to do with it, but I am very disapointed.

  • @dsoindustrial2479
    @dsoindustrial2479 Год назад +7

    I bought a CHT for our Prusa Mini, but took it out due to excess stringing and no time to dial that in. However, I'll be buying the abrasion resistant version as soon as they come out for both the mini and MK3s.
    Not only in principal do I avoid knockoff products because there is very real money put into development, but crap machining is just that, and I don't have time to deal with more crap.

    • @wolfsworkshop9095
      @wolfsworkshop9095 Год назад +1

      yes, but, the thing is that even the "knock off" took time to develop and make it viable for production, it's not a 100% clone/knock off that has near to zero innovation in the design and most importantly, design like this are critical to make the tecnology go foward in a viable direction where you can actually use the product and truly test it's limit on a world wide scale

  • @geekoid183
    @geekoid183 Год назад +1

    I have a tricky question.
    When I'm pushing the flowrate to the limit of my hotend, klipper shows that the heater is on all the time (PWM 100%). Though, the temperature is slowly dropping until this triggers the thermal runaway.
    Will a cht nozzle improve my max flowrate ?
    Because I'm already transferring 100% of the available power to the filament, I don't think so.
    What do you think ?

  • @РикСанчес-я6з
    @РикСанчес-я6з Год назад +5

    I love AliExpress stuff, it's quality is usually OK, but price is ACTUALLY reasonable. Also they often give their own spin to western ideas, and it comes out simpler, and sometimes even better in performance. Good job on their side, and let the people decide, if they want to buy on eBay or AliExpress.

    • @nekononiaow
      @nekononiaow Год назад

      The price is reasonable because labor conditions suck and the lack of environmental standards means the Chinese are steadily converting their country into a toxic wasteland and emit more CO2 than the rest of the world. That cannot stay that cheap forever without consequences.

    • @repairman2be250
      @repairman2be250 Год назад

      I hope you don't buy any flash drives, SSD, IC's, transistor's and the like from Ali. Pretty much all is fake and does not work properly.

    • @РикСанчес-я6з
      @РикСанчес-я6з Год назад +1

      @@repairman2be250 actually I do, and I check this stuff and it does really match the specs. And runs pretty well. It's a good way to save on price ups of local stores.
      You don't have to avoid Ali, you just have to have more than couple braincells to buy there.

    • @repairman2be250
      @repairman2be250 Год назад

      @@РикСанчес-я6з Some example of things you claim runs pretty well?

    • @РикСанчес-я6з
      @РикСанчес-я6з Год назад +1

      @@repairman2be250 anything. From two bucks arduinos to i7-11800/RTX3070 laptops. They deliver exactly what's advertised, which you can confirm by buyers reviews before buying.

  • @HomeDistiller
    @HomeDistiller Год назад +2

    i wonder if there would be any improvement if you solder the insert in place. in both the heat transfer and stringing? im wondering if the stringing is due to the insert moving at higher retract settings?

    • @foldionepapyrus3441
      @foldionepapyrus3441 Год назад

      To solder without blocking the final nozzle path would be challenging to achieve, as the solder largely goes where the heat is, and that lump on the inside will heat slower than the outer and the thinner tip likely heats up quickest of all, so I'd not try it myself. Also doubt its required - the heat is applied to the outside part and the coldest bit will be the insert itself so thermal expansion difference between them if the fit is reasonably close may lock the core in place while it is in use anyway. Though this does seem like the perfect part to machine to a good tight pushfit upfront to me.
      Personally I expect the increase in stringing with greater retracts is that the filament in one or other of those channels is snapped off from the feed so its own weight makes it leak out badly as its lost that upwards pull from the rest of the filament.

  • @VolkanTaninmis
    @VolkanTaninmis Год назад +7

    If want to achieve full heating performance of your setup, use hi-temp thermal paste around heater and nozzle - block threads.

  • @MegaMaking
    @MegaMaking Год назад +3

    hey i have 4 of these exact same clones lol even the packaging is the same, the QR code on the plastic bag is just some random numbers i presumed are some manufacturing tracking code or something. there are a new design i've seen that uses butt hole shape where the center isn't connected, so in theory this could bypass the patent altogether since it is considered just a single hole with irregular shape. i wonder if someone can run the designs through some heat transfer simulations to figure out which is the most ideal shape.

  • @bustedbankrolls2746
    @bustedbankrolls2746 4 месяца назад

    I got the "harden steel" cht .6 off aliexpress and was blown away. I have 5 more coming in various sizes. These are great for the cost

  • @DonnerPlays
    @DonnerPlays Год назад +4

    I've been running a mellow cht volcano clone for a while now and it works excellent so far. Quality wise it also looks much better then what you had there.

    • @JorgeMarioManuelOrtega
      @JorgeMarioManuelOrtega Год назад

      Way expensive too . Mellow was at 25 USD if I remember well

    • @DonnerPlays
      @DonnerPlays Год назад

      @@JorgeMarioManuelOrtega I paid 12$ for two (so 6$ for one)

  • @pugofstardock
    @pugofstardock Год назад +1

    I did send you the nozzle and it came loose during shipping. It was one part when I put in the mail but I didn't use mine jet. Just tried to move it a bit with some steel wire and it seems to be fixed in the nozzle.

  • @hebijirik
    @hebijirik Год назад +7

    I like my CHT nozzles. Especially since I have a 500x500x500 printer. I am very happy to see they are working on an abrasive resistant variant of it and I will for sure buy some. The difference in speed when I have to print abrasive material with a non-CHT nozzle is really anoying. To buy an aliexpress part the part has to convince me first to be of significantly superior performance for my usecase. And even then I am reluctant to trust it compared to something where I know who makes it where and how.

  • @agaldoo
    @agaldoo 7 месяцев назад

    I finally found out what the detachable core is for. When you clog your nozzle you can unclog it easily

  • @itgschumpfaischgnuagloabat2058
    @itgschumpfaischgnuagloabat2058 Год назад +3

    Hi Stefan. Danke für deine hervorragenden Videos! Ich schau deine Videos sehr gerne an und du machst das nicht nur professionell, sondern so sympathisch! Viele Grüße aus Süddeutschland!

  • @reneradostics1313
    @reneradostics1313 Год назад +1

    Maybe if you heat up the nozzle to printing temperature, the copper part would expand more than the nozzle and gets (more) contact to the nozzle ?

  • @AllAbout3D
    @AllAbout3D Год назад +3

    I wonder whether boron nitride thermal paste between the copper insert and the brass housing would improve this nozzle...should be an interesting experiment.

    • @MegaMaking
      @MegaMaking Год назад +3

      are you kidding me or something? the paste would have mixed and possibly react with your molten filament. thats doesn't require half a brain to figure out...

    • @AllAbout3D
      @AllAbout3D Год назад

      @@MegaMaking If you use a small amount it can get stuck only between the threads, and any excess that might seep out into the nozzle/heatbreak can be cleaned by purging some filament. Nevertheless, you don't have to be a douchebag when responding to comments.

  • @DARKredDOLLAR
    @DARKredDOLLAR Год назад +1

    I do t even think it's a knock off. How can a knock off be superior? And the design is completely different. It does not infringe on a patent.

  • @bitcoinsig
    @bitcoinsig Год назад +3

    In many ways the Chinese parts are keeping in spirit of the open source frameworks that these products even exist in the first place. Companies like E3d and bondtech should be focused on trying to compete on higher quality and making them at a competitive price, not by taking the open source works, making a tiny modification, then patenting it so they can charge 10 times the cost.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Год назад

      These Western companies will usually have the first-mover advantage, plus consistency and the sorts of assurances that institutional customers need, as well as better understanding of the institutional market. This adds up to quite a bit of leverage.

  • @medienmond
    @medienmond Год назад +1

    11,44€ for a pack of 9 nozzles in three siizes (0.4, 0.6, 0.8mm). Including shipping. This is below 1.30€ each! Power to evolution items...

  • @salmon85
    @salmon85 Год назад +5

    nice vid as always

  • @goeland86
    @goeland86 Год назад +2

    I don't want to get involved on the legal side of the argument, but what we're seeing are some interesting results based primarily, I assume, on manufacturing process differences.
    The fact the copper insert melts the filament faster is very interesting and does raise the question as to whether the bondtech cht were researched as thoroughly as they could have been for printing throughout efficiency. That they're releasing versions with inserts later tends to make me think the original v6 format cht were, like Microsoft Windows for a long time, beta products used to gather feedback on what works and what breaks.
    It would be very interesting to see what the internal testing before finalizing the design at bondtech looked like on their nozzle, because they clearly missed something if a $2 build can outpace it.

    • @goeland86
      @goeland86 Год назад

      Just saw my local reseller added then to inventory for sale... $48 a piece for the bimetallic v6 format 🤯 even Revo obxidian aren't that pricey here!

  • @pavelgorlachuk1460
    @pavelgorlachuk1460 Год назад +1

    Why even bother making holes circular? The open groove would also work.
    Regarding the loose fit: at 200C it might be much different as the expansion coefficients are different. Try heating the nozzle and removing the copper inlay part.

  • @kinzokushirogane1594
    @kinzokushirogane1594 Год назад +2

    Could you do a more indepth test on linewidth vs nozzle shape? In this video, at 12:40 we can see that the Bondtech has a much wider flat portion at the tip of the nozzle, while the Aliexpress is narrower and almost looks rounded over. How would this affect printing when you increase lineWidth to a factor 1.5-2.5 times that of the nozzle diameter? I have successfully printed line widths of up to 1.5mm with my 0.6 nozzle, so I'm wondering how this would compare between the Bondtech and knockoff in a similar test. If the 0.4 Bondtech could print 1mm linewidths and the Aliexpress could not, that would be another reason to get the genuine one. Considering that CHT nozzles entire selling point is high flow, this particular test would definitively be interesting.

  • @shardperson3777
    @shardperson3777 Год назад +1

    Patents have historically done nothing but make 3d printers less accessible, we only have the good consumer grade printers we have now because of patents running out in the first place. I hope they don't manage to patent it at all.

  • @erwinravau
    @erwinravau Год назад

    For me this Ali nozzle worked more than expected on a Voron 2.4 high speed printing with a Dragon hotend. Thx. Excellent.

  • @MidMadn
    @MidMadn Год назад +1

    I'm not totally anti patent but - If they priced the product fairly - nobody would feel the need to copy it and sell it much cheaper. $20.00 for a nozzle just because it has 3 little holes drilled in it at an angle is highway robbery and taking advantage of the consumer. It didn't cost crap to develop that. They probably stole the idea from someone else anyway. More power to the knockoffs in this case.

  • @transcendtient
    @transcendtient Год назад +1

    I wonder if permanently soldering it to the hot end with high temp solder would make it perform even better.

  • @crawlerin
    @crawlerin Год назад +2

    Hi Stefan, If your extruder is the limiting factor now, maybe you should look into extruders used in higher speed printers or those with higher torque? Like Orbiter/Galileo, Sherpa Mini, Double-Folded Ascender?

    • @motomarco_
      @motomarco_ Год назад

      Sherpa Mini and similar do not have a ton of torque, it actually is pretty weak compared to proper Nema17 extruders.

    • @crawlerin
      @crawlerin Год назад

      @@motomarco_ Aha, I missed he uses Hemera, in that case it may be right.

  • @radry100
    @radry100 9 месяцев назад

    I recently got some copies from ali and the plug was stuck very well. It's impossible to remove and shining a light inside shows it's very smooth and shiny. Seems like you got some bad quality ones.

  • @x_jaydn
    @x_jaydn Год назад +1

    I got a set of these nozzles two weeks or so, ago.
    Using a 0.5mm version of this Clone CHT with a Mellow Volcano Spacer, I can get up ~50mm^3/s (T-215°C, 220mm/s, Layer Height 0.20, Extrusion Width 1.1 with PLA(+).
    As for (OVERTURE CLEAR) PETG, I'm having difficulty breaking 15mm/s^3. I've been running calibration models for the last 8 hours or so, lol

    • @twanheijkoop6753
      @twanheijkoop6753 Год назад

      I tested the same setup you mentioned with a sprite extruder. I was able to get 34mm3/s.
      Using esun pla+ at 200°C

    • @x_jaydn
      @x_jaydn Год назад +1

      @@twanheijkoop6753 I'm using a clone BMG mounted as direct drive using the Hero Me Gen 6 hotend assembly
      T-215°C for PLA+
      I'm in the middle of a PETG vase flow speed test (like Stefan's), and I'm at T-245°C 36mm^3/s right now (150mm/s, Layer Height 0.20mm, Extrusion Width 1.20mm, needing to bump-up my Extrusion Flow to 142% to get 1.2mm dimensional accuracy)
      I'm trying to see if I can get my PETG flow (currently 36mm^3/s) to match my 50mm^3/s PLA flow

    • @x_jaydn
      @x_jaydn Год назад

      42mm^3/s now (T-245°C, 175mm/s, Layer Height 0.20mm, Extrusion Width 1.20mm)

  • @codyhufstetler643
    @codyhufstetler643 Год назад

    The insert thing is something I actually tried. I literally just took an old piece of copper pipe, cut a bit out and hammered it into flat copper sheet, then cut a little piece that slid down into the neck of the nozzle. I can't remember the exact speeds, but it was a 0.8mm nozzle, I think I was doing 0.3mm layer heights, and 60mm/s? So not crazy fast, but almost 50% faster than the 10mm^3/s Stefan mentioned in the video.

  • @satibel
    @satibel Год назад

    Try to heat the nozzle assembly and check if it pulls, I think it may be tight at 200C with the copper expanding a little.

  • @mnrobards
    @mnrobards Год назад +2

    I will support Work of the Innovators as long as pricing is reasonable. Nozzles wear out, become clogged or damaged by end user so there is a maximum I’ll pay. currently trying the nozzles. I do hate to see open source go away. I still buy my V6 parts and nozzles from E3D but their pricing will reach a point where I cannot afford “real” product and have to switch to knockoffs.

  • @MattOckendon
    @MattOckendon Год назад +1

    Kudos to Stefan for taking such a neutral and evidence based approach. Compare and contrast with 'Design Prototype Test' with his vitriolic rants on the same kind of issues.

  • @nutronik9
    @nutronik9 Год назад +2

    I'll buy bondtech abrasive nozzles when they come out of there any good, I don't care to buy from Ali unless I can't find what I'm looking somewhere else.

  • @jacklap5372
    @jacklap5372 Год назад +1

    Not sure if this has been previously explored but an idea I had for an improvement in layer adhesion might be to micro step the z by .1mm or so up and down in some interval on the internal surfaces to in a way stitch the layers together.

    • @NeoIsrafil
      @NeoIsrafil Год назад

      cura has something similar in its adaptive layer sizes that are just coming out, uses smaller and bigger lines to make a smoother print which naturally shrinks the gaps in the model. Honestly my layer adhesion is great though, and I print in ABS... Just get you a heat lamp for reptiles (or the bathroom kind from home depot works great and is cheaper) and wire it up as a chamber heater for your printer. ^_^

    • @JohnnyYenn
      @JohnnyYenn Год назад

      Cool idea but I think that this would be too much stress for the z axis motor/assembly. For example if you had 0.5mm long by 0.1mm high 'stitches', and were printing at 80mm/s this would mean that the z axis would have to move up and down extremely precisely 160 times per second 😬