CHT Volcano Launch Video - Ender 2001: A 3D Printing Oddity

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 143

  • @nunovicente34
    @nunovicente34 Год назад +22

    Your videos are cool but you should first learn/study about what you do and recommend on your videos, because
    I’ve seen quiet some wrong and cringe things from your videos

  • @medyk3D
    @medyk3D Год назад +10

    The amounts of paste on the nozzle/block connection is for sure the biggest factor here 👍

  • @DanielRobichaud
    @DanielRobichaud Год назад +2

    This is why NBR is my best educational channel for 3D printing... I'm a newbie that like to understand the details about thermodynamics, mechanics and physics, because those details are very important. Not just "do this and you will resolve your problems".
    Thanks

    • @starguy9
      @starguy9 Год назад

      I agree. I was watching other channels, but they didn't teach well. This guy explains things for the average joe while doing challenging work. That's my learning style.

    • @NM-wd7kx
      @NM-wd7kx Год назад

      I also recommend 'lost in tech', similar approach (& I believe NBR watches him too)

  • @CandidProle
    @CandidProle Год назад +2

    I gotta try this on my kp3s! Awesome video!

  • @Reindeer-ry2lf
    @Reindeer-ry2lf Год назад +2

    Ohhhhhhyeeeaaaaah baby let's do this, keep the filament flowing baby. 💪✌️🇺🇸😎

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      I need to do a 5kg spool time lapse

    • @Reindeer-ry2lf
      @Reindeer-ry2lf Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots ohh that's one monster amount of filament in one print. Even at klipper speed that's going to take a while 😂😜

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      @@Reindeer-ry2lf I'm not sure it's possible to fit 5kg in this printer build volume.
      Gonna have to switch the cht setup over to my Ender3 S1 Plus

  • @caramelzappa
    @caramelzappa Год назад +8

    Okay I'm assuming this was for humors sake but if anyone is watching for actual advice, with thermal paste less is more. You want a minimal thin layer, not a giant messy glob.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +14

      That may be true in computer hardware, but with this stuff any excess will be displaced by the significantly huge clamping load. An M6 thread tightened to 1.5 N*m equates to 200 kgf or 500lbf
      A typical cpu heatsink retainer only applies about 10 lbf

    • @caramelzappa
      @caramelzappa Год назад +3

      @@NathanBuildsRobots That's valid reasoning, but I still think it was an excessive amount, compared to for reference, slices own boron nitrate installation video.
      I had some other thoughts on the video, please don't take them as argumentative or critcisim, just a different perspective and possibilites from my own limited experience printing. I enjoyed the video and really like your presentation style.
      When it comes to scraping, I have two alternate possible reasons. I think the canteliever design is fine for small, light toolheads, but the sprite added a significant amount of weight and moving mass to the gantry. The effect of that mass is of course greater the closer it is to the end of the canteliever.
      My stock ender 2 pro has zero problems with scraping or flexing on the canteliever X, and I believe that is mostly to do with both perfectly adjusted v wheels and keeping the toolhead light. The sprite is really on the havier end, even compared to other direct drive options like a printed sherpa mini or saiflin extruder with a pancake motor.
      Another thing to look at that I didn't see you mention in the video is tuning flow. Most of the time if I'm expeceriencing scraping of any kind, if it's not a mechanical issue like misaligned axes, poor bed leveling, etc, it is pretty much always extrusion multiplier aka flow rate %. You didn't mention tuning flow. You should not only tune your esteps for the new sprite extruder (which I asssume you did) but also tune flow per filament and especially now that you have modified your flow characteristics with the CHT and UHF nut. If you have too much flow you will experience scraping.
      Another thought is the cooling, I know you said you were going to modify the duct to be properly aimed at the lower nozzle. I would suggest also looking into trihorn or any other tyle of duct that cools from multiple angles. The faster and hotter your printing the more helpful it is to have more coverage with your cooling.
      Not mentioned in the video but I think important to do when you make changes like this, is a PID tune for your heater. You can do this in marlin with pronterface or even just by putting the right commands in a gcode file on the SD card. This ensures you're heater is getting to and keeping consistant temperature throughout the print.
      A silicolne sock would help too, one possibility is cutting down both a rapido and sprite sock to properly cover both parts of the heater/nozzle. I did something similar on my CHC PRO hotend that I also put the rapido UHF on.
      I'm eager to see your experience with the Tronxy Crux 1, on paper I think it's one of the best desgined printers in the cheap canteliever segment, but I have no first hand experience with one yet.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      @polurazonituc It spat those out on the first print. Little white chunks in there. On 0.4mm nozzles that can be very annoying, but 1.2mm nozzle just passes it no problem

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +3

      ​@@caramelzappa Thanks, you have a lot of good points. My mods are the junk food of 3D printer mods. Just slapping things on and pressing go.
      I'm good with the mechanical stuff, but anything in firmware or tuning takes me ages to figure out - so more often than not I just leave the stock firmware and tuning.
      yeah the duct coming from multiple angles would be good. On the green one, the previous layers are still tacky. If you check out my other CHT video (ruclips.net/video/CO3-sPOmD2k/видео.html), I have a better cooling fan design on-hand. I should put that on for the 100mm^3 test, or use a much larger model with way longer layer times, and an external fan, or whole layer fan coming from behind. I actually modeled something for that! Might try it in a future video.
      I didn't re-level the bed. With the extra weight, the bed should probably be tilted a little bit so its lower on the right.
      Would also like to try the KP3 Pro , but Kingroon said they want me to review their PEX sheet first.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      @@caramelzappa Also, yeah, it was excessive. There was a little plug of dried material at the end, a nozzle clog if you will. So I was just trying to not let it go to waste! Probably would have used about 1/4 as much.

  • @seebuch93
    @seebuch93 Год назад +1

    resin printing the fan shroud. very cool stuff on this channel

  • @JonS
    @JonS Год назад +6

    You should try the Rat Rig V-Minion. It shows that a cantilevered x can be reasonably rigid if you use wide-enough extrusions and a good-sized linear rail on the z. Not as stiff as dual z rails, but stiff enough. Especially when used with a NEMA14 36mm pancake based extruder.

  • @avejst
    @avejst Год назад +1

    Interesting video as always 👍
    Thanks for sharing your experience with All of us 👍😃

  • @MichaelWatersJ
    @MichaelWatersJ Год назад +2

    Those nozzle extensions really need some insulation. I actually saturated my 50 W heater at 263 C (target 270 C) and ~60 mm^3/s because it was losing so much heat from the extension.

  • @FounderOf4
    @FounderOf4 Год назад +1

    Great video and I love the wit, glad I subscribed!

  • @middleagebrotips3454
    @middleagebrotips3454 Год назад +1

    Another thing that determines the speed of heat transfer is temperature difference, bigger difference bigger speed. Therefore, without any upgrades just raise the hotend temperature. The downside is that because of uneven heating your "skin" of the filament could be burning before the inside is fully melted

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      True. I think the cht features help stir things up and chop up that solid core, but I have noticed at high speed it's still an issue

  • @kikmedown
    @kikmedown Год назад +1

    You removed your vid before i got to finish watching it this morning. Thought my WiFi went out.
    Thank goodness I have another ender 2 pro to try this on. Gotta check to see if i can still purchase your board. Been waiting for this video. I noticed you and CHEP have used this printer in recent videos. I like it.
    Thanks

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +2

      Yeah, YT decided to remove the 4k quality option, so I had to reupload.
      I AINT BURNING HUNDREDS OF GB ON MY LAPTOP FOR NO REASON!

  • @omegaknight7
    @omegaknight7 Год назад +1

    go for it nathan

  • @kevinm3751
    @kevinm3751 Год назад

    I have been using Arctic Silver thermal paste, same paste I use for my computer and it has worked fantastic and no it does not smoke or burn!

  • @sierraecho884
    @sierraecho884 Год назад

    The printed object looks really good high quality.

  • @elray753
    @elray753 Год назад +1

    I’m watching your video waiting for my ender2 to be delivered

  • @benscottbongiben
    @benscottbongiben Год назад +1

    As always a brilliant video, this is exactly the sort of upgrade I am looking to do. If anything faster prints convince others of 3D printing being something accessible. Also larger layer lines give functional prints

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      Yes, nobody will wait around at a store or market for you to print something for them in 5 hrs, but if you can do it in 10 minutes, that's going to be huge.
      Online orders and stuff are still fine with current speed printing, because it usually takes longer to ship them, but some kind of same-day on-demand service would still be pretty unique. Just like ordering dominos or doordash.

  • @daliasprints9798
    @daliasprints9798 Год назад +1

    In my experience, temperatures at least up to 300°C are fine for pure PLA unless you're going to let it just sit idle and bake for minutes at a time.

  • @TTPF_
    @TTPF_ 10 месяцев назад

    On stock boards you have to connect via ISP port with an Atmel programmer. Flash the bootloader on the controller, and after that, you can flash your firmware on it via a USB cable.

  • @Gryzounours
    @Gryzounours Год назад +1

    Hey great informative video as always. I own a tronxy crux 1, it's a very nice machine especially the metal wheels that makes it very robust and reliable. I can't wait to see your review and ideas of updates.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      It looks like the Crux fixed several of my complaints about the Ender 2 Pro. We will see if it survives judgment day!
      I definitely want to update the extruder. I kind of hate titan extruders. They are really great, reliable, solid extruders. But they crap out above 12 mm^3/s in my experience. I NEED MORE SPEED!!!
      Fortunately I have a Bondtech LGX Mini laying around that needs a host.

  • @sierraecho884
    @sierraecho884 Год назад

    Now you can 3D Print your own 3mm Filament xD

  • @MichaelWatersJ
    @MichaelWatersJ Год назад +3

    Boron Nitride is so inert that the mystery liquid it's suspended in is the bigger concern.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      I assumed it was just water, but I don't know about that! Its odorless.

    • @joshuaharlow4241
      @joshuaharlow4241 Год назад +1

      Guys, you really need to cut out all the interesting chat, I need to get some sleep.

    • @satibel
      @satibel Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots probably silicone or mineral oil, do not eat it, but it should be fine unless you're allergic (silicone oil is used as a lube for sexual intercourse).
      the silicone grease may melt the silicone sock/make it sticky though, but that's not a big issue.

  • @Rolohaun
    @Rolohaun Год назад +1

    great work

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      Thanks! Any thoughts on doing a 1-armed DIY printer running klipper?
      I have some drawings on how to make this thing a lot stronger, by having 2 arms, but placing them both on the left side. There are some pretty nice and compact ways of doing it.

    • @Rolohaun
      @Rolohaun Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots I think the Ratrig V minion already has a solid one are printer. But your design sounds cool

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      @@Rolohaun I just watched the modbot video. Looks like a solid printer. Not a huge fan of the external electronics box. They need someone to work on the packaging!

    • @Rolohaun
      @Rolohaun Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots I agree

  • @trashpanda9433
    @trashpanda9433 Год назад

    I love this! Time to do this on my printer that doesn't work yet. I don't know this printer board, but you may need to flash a boot loader to the printer. Its not that usual for that to be needed anymore.

  • @joed1978
    @joed1978 Год назад +1

    Wow… this episode is different. And I learned a lot of stuff.

  • @gvfq
    @gvfq 11 месяцев назад

    The problem with the fast print is material cooling, put a fan close to the printer.

  • @petercallison5765
    @petercallison5765 Год назад +1

    You are missing the point of the Volcano Hotend. You need a volcano heat block to transfer heat to the full length of the nozzle.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      I thought so too, but CNC Kitchen did a pretty good video on topic. I watched it after making this video, so I added a reference to it in the video description.

  • @corlissmedia2.0
    @corlissmedia2.0 Год назад +2

    I feel like I haven’t heard any of your thoughts, comments, and information from any of the other people presenting their 3D printing experiences. Your views and knowledge are very appreciated.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +2

      Yes, my background is a little different. I'm not really a "maker", more like a professional engineer with a lot to say about the state of 3d printing 🙂

  • @MFEeee
    @MFEeee 3 дня назад

    Even with dual Z axis you still get misalignment over time and rubbing top layer

  • @andreasantoniou5098
    @andreasantoniou5098 Год назад +3

    Thats a lot of flow especially on 75 mm3/s, great work. By the way the model you print looks good, is it yours or we can find it anywhere??

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +3

      It's called rectangular vase mode trash can or something, I'll try to look it up and add to the description

    • @andreasantoniou5098
      @andreasantoniou5098 Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots Thanks a lot, keep up the good work!!

  • @nikolaipotapov9567
    @nikolaipotapov9567 Год назад

    I really don't understand why it's complicated? If you bought a wonderful paste, then you have the opportunity to buy a normal volcano block. For better heat transfer to the nozzle, we must remove the air barrier. Any paste for the processor is suitable for this. You also need to apply the paste on the throat at the junction with the radiator. Once again I want to say that any thermal paste and any heating unit like volcano will do. You will get a fairly large flow of plastic and therefore a high print speed. I would pay attention to the extruder mechanism for stable printing with any filaments. Good luck

    • @ivyr336
      @ivyr336 Год назад +1

      No. You can't use any thermal paste. The stuff for pc parts are rated for around 100c. Here we print at up to 300c. Three times the limit. You don't fuck around with limits.

  • @imst4722
    @imst4722 Год назад +1

    Is it a good idea putting all that boron nitride paste into the filament path? Doesn't that stuff harden and clog the nozzle?

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      It came out with the first bit of extruded plastic. With a 1.2mm nozzle, clogging isn't too much of an issue.
      On a 0.4mm you might have a problem.

  • @madcannon3162
    @madcannon3162 Год назад +2

    You could of used the excess boron nitride as war paint

  • @Scoobydcs
    @Scoobydcs 9 месяцев назад +1

    how does mm/2 convert into mm/3 print speeds?

  • @wenn1215
    @wenn1215 Год назад +3

    is there an anonymous "print faster" group therapy i could go to?

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      Yes, they have weekly meetings at the 3D printing community center

    • @wenn1215
      @wenn1215 Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots next to the micro center?, isnt that like have an AA next to a liqure store

  • @AndrewAHayes
    @AndrewAHayes Год назад +3

    Some other channels have shown the application of Boron Nitride Paste to every union in the hot-end, this should not be done under any circumstances, manufacturers make their throats from low conductivity metals to stop heatcreep so the last thing you need to do is increase that conductivity between the block and the throat, personally I dont use it at all!

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      The Copperhead heatbreak uses a copper upper and lower portion joined by a insulating stainless steel tube. The idea is it essentially turns the lower part of the heatbreak into a part of the nozzle. The difference in heat transfer is marginal. I think what this cht is doing makes a whole lot of sense, because it's moving the "impinging" area from the nozzle taper at the end of the nozzle, up to the top of the nozzle. The positron does a similar thing with their 90 degree angle heater block.
      This way, the rest of the nozzle is just mixing the filament up to give it a nice uniform consistency by the time it exits.

    • @AndrewAHayes
      @AndrewAHayes Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots The video I saw of Boron paste being used everywhere was a stock Micro Swiss hot-end with it applied to the nozzle thread and both ends of the heatbreak, I won't mention who it was but he should have known better, I was absolutely gobsmacked and thought he would have taken the video down after it was pointed out by myself and half a dozen other people but no, the video is still there to this day, I have a CHT nozzle that I intended to use with my Copperhead but haven't got around to using it as yet, pure laziness on my part!

    • @pmcquay1
      @pmcquay1 Год назад

      You want heat to transfer away from the top part of the heatbreak as quickly as possible. If filament melts in the top part of the break you get jams.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      @@pmcquay1 ​ @ᗩᑎᗪᖇEᗯ ᕼᗩYEᔕ Yes, but on the cold side of the hotend, you want to lower the thermal resistance as much as possible, including use of thermal compound, so it immediately dissipate any heat that makes it through the heatbreak. The optimal resistance for all components is 0, with the exception of the heatbreak, whose optimal resistance is infinity.
      I was working on a thermal model of the hotend system earlier this year. I want to make a online simulator that shows the effect of increasing/decreasing thermal resistance at different locations on the hotend.
      Things get complicated when you look at dynamic response of these thermal systems, which accounts for the thermal mass of each item, and the on/off cycle of the extruder and heater cartridge.

    • @pmcquay1
      @pmcquay1 Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots your first paragraph is literally what I said.

  • @JaredCoiner
    @JaredCoiner Год назад

    I picked up an Ender 2 Pro this weekend. I'm considering picking up a Sprite Pro to put on it. I have an S1 Pro and I like the Sprite on that. I'd be interested to see a video of you installing klipper or some other firmware on it, so that we can see those higher temps.

  • @tuttuti123
    @tuttuti123 Год назад

    About the firmware, I've been flashing my ender 3 that came with a weird GD32 MCU compared to the usual STM32 MCU. All i have to do is instead of writing firmwarexxx to the bin file, i renamed it to GDFxxx. Works for me and i honestly don't see any problem.

  • @217RockStar217
    @217RockStar217 Год назад +1

    Just add a motherboard upgrade to it to get around your firmware issues 🤷
    Like skr e3 v3 xyxxdoodaa board

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      I've got too much other cap going on, otherwise I totally would.

  • @jayliew
    @jayliew Год назад +1

    what is the nozzle diameter of the cht volcano? is it the 0.6mm one

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      The one that is installed here is a 1.2mm diameter

    • @jayliew
      @jayliew Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots oh thx i’ll be getting a cht soon i want to play with it and push my ender 3 s1

  • @grahamturner2640
    @grahamturner2640 Год назад +2

    Where did you get the Volcano CHT nozzle from?

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      I know a guy at bondtech. But they are for sale at a number of online stores now

  • @melangkoh4184
    @melangkoh4184 Год назад

    as far as i know, even Slice does not recommend this on the nozzle.

  • @iamdmc
    @iamdmc Год назад +2

    Nathan what do you think about combining an S1 with Klipper firmware/input shaping (via 2-step Creality Sonic Pad), CHT nozzle & nuts (as Stefan on CNC kitchen did), and upping the print speed to max?
    great vid as always. Thanks again for designing that wicked fan shroud - I've got it on my S1 and did similar fan mods to you too (albeit with buck converters rather than zenner diodes or resistors). Also have the all metal hotend from creality
    loving my heavily modified, silent S1 with Octoprint. Still to be done: enclosure and klipper/CHT nozzle so I can print high speed and/or high temp technical materials like the PA6-CF I bought a few weeks back. I'd love to install linear rails for the X axis as the gantry has so much play that no amount of nut tightening resolves, but I'll also have to buy new 2020 extrusion to replace the X-axis as creality brilliantly only got extrusion that is open on top/bottom rather than all 4 sides
    plan is to eventually 3D print a 3D printer (structure)

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      I don't like klipper all that much. With how many machines I have, and always switching them around, I prefer the old-school workflow. Its annoying to browse through 12 printers on your local network compared to pointing at a printer and inserting an SD card.
      But I'm not "most people", and I think most people will prefer to have 1-3 printers set up on their network, and printing away.
      CHT can't do CF reinforced. The flow splitting features are pretty delicate and would probably get worn down pretty quick. They are working on a Tool Steel version. Should be pretty exciting. I imagine they are going to have to use Electric Discharge Machining or metal 3D printing to realize the geometry, since it's hard to drill small holes in tool steel, because it's so hard. Plus they have to do their own testing and quality assurance. I think they are taking their time to get it right.
      On this machine, I had issues with the printhead plate barely having enough adjustability to get it tight. So I think they didn't design enough range into this thing to reliable snug things up... Thanks Creality! Best bet would be to get another carriage or maybe loosen the bolts for the 2 top wheels, and retighten them while pushing down to lock them in at the narrow end of things.

    • @iamdmc
      @iamdmc Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots thanks for the reply
      I'm planning for klipper+cht for high speed PLA prints only. TPU will still be regular speed for material property reasons. The enclosure + all metal hotend + hardened steel nozzles are for PA6-CF and PC, probably at only slightly higher speed than usual depending on what I can get away with and if klipper is any help
      The S1 is an amazing printer and with a few upgrades is becoming one of the most capable printers on the midrange market. I only paid £220 taxes in here in the UK, and probably £100 in purchased upgrades. Yes octoprint isn't for everyone but I like the spaghetti detection ai plugin, octolapse photography, live previews, and the option of not having to incessantly plug and unplug the sd card between multiple devices.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      @@iamdmc Yeah the S1 is pretty good. Except for the screaming stock hotend cooling fan XD

    • @grahamturner2640
      @grahamturner2640 Год назад +2

      @@NathanBuildsRobots where did you get your Volcano CHT from?

    • @iamdmc
      @iamdmc Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots creality just wanted to encourage modding ;)

  • @ernestogalban2597
    @ernestogalban2597 Год назад +1

    Please figure out how to flash the board and get better from that. You can push it you got the experience..

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      We've time I try to flash firmware it takes me 20 hrs. I'm not too good at that stuff. I don't know how Chris's basement can make hour long firmware tutorial videos without throwing his printer off a bridge halfway through.
      I think I'm just going to swap this hotend over to my Ender 3 Pro, which should already have 300C unlocked in the firmware.

  • @mmja6133
    @mmja6133 Год назад +2

    A 100mm3/s is a LSD Land

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      Acid? Limited Slip Differential?

    • @mmja6133
      @mmja6133 Год назад +1

      @@NathanBuildsRobots hahaha Nono, LSD Hotend ruclips.net/video/5nwWHRBwtsI/видео.html

  • @Leviathan3DPrinting
    @Leviathan3DPrinting Год назад +1

    I think you severely underestimate the bowden lol.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      You're right, i did some tests on stock bowden setup on the V2. It's not too bad!
      www.nathanbuildsrobots.com/testing/ender3v2
      However,I never liked the print quality I get out of bowden setups above 8 mm³/s. And I'm too lazy to set up linear advance

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      Compare that to the extrusion rate consistency of the S1 with the Sprite... night and day difference
      www.nathanbuildsrobots.com/testing/ender3s1

    • @Leviathan3DPrinting
      @Leviathan3DPrinting Год назад +1

      I am well aware that printing a speed benchy and phat layers are very different types of flow however keep in mind that the fastest printers in the world are bowden. Minus Vez3d but he also doesn't have the world's fastest benchy. He's slowing himself down dragging along all that weight. I think for absolutely consistency the shorter the distance between the drive rollers and the nozzle the better but even then a well (tuned) printer outperforms everything else.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      @@Leviathan3DPrinting all good points. My approach to speed is to put a monster extruder/ hotend on a basic printer. This makes my printer very fast in terms of filament feed rate, but no improvement in the print speed in terms of the speed that the print head is moving.
      I want to do a deep-dive on this topic, but I feel like I need at least one real speed printer, with 250+ mm/s motion system and input shaping.

  • @sebozwierz
    @sebozwierz Год назад

    Hi. What was layer width x hight you used in vase mode?

  • @AlexAlex-bh8fi
    @AlexAlex-bh8fi Год назад

    Can this upgrade prevent clog?

  • @Lurker1222
    @Lurker1222 Год назад +1

    I wish I was.. smart... lol

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      Subscribing to my channel increases your iq by 10 pts. Each like and comment is another +1
      You’ll be a genius in no time!

    • @Lurker1222
      @Lurker1222 Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots OMG
      . I subbed today and watched and like 3 of your videos! I feel smarter already!

  • @heyitsdrew
    @heyitsdrew Год назад +1

    what was the size of nozzle? and at what line width was it sliced at?

    • @iamdmc
      @iamdmc Год назад

      0.6mm?

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      This one was a 1.2mm nozzle with 3mm width, 1.2mm layer height, vase mode with 3 bottom layers.
      I set the max volumetric flow rate to 25mm^3/s in the "filament" tab of PrusaSlicer, then increased the print speed multiplier on the 3D printer screen to increase it to 50mm^3/s, 75mm^3/s, etc.

  • @motelgrim
    @motelgrim Месяц назад +1

    Dude, WHY does everyone use SO MUCH paste?!? It's simply not necessary. I see all these youtubers doing this and if you harken back from the computer building days you'll know you're just trying to fill in gaps - microscopic gaps - in the surfaces of your two items. Too much is actually no bueno although since, in the case of 3d printer nozzles, you're screwing things together I guess it matters a little less but yeah. Save yourself a messy cleanup. Just use enough to coat the threads ;)

  • @Barlos69
    @Barlos69 Год назад +1

    I currently have an ender 3 but I can never really get the non z screw side of the arm tight enough. So I would like to buy an ender 2 however I mostly print functional stuff with asa and my preferred bed temp for that is 100°C and I believe this tops out at 80°c any chance you can fix that with a firmware update? Also love the content!

    • @kristian6087
      @kristian6087 Год назад +1

      if you're printing ASA I hope you have a filter and fume extraction setup.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      As designed the Ender 3 is overconstrained.
      A proper design would allow left/right float on the right side z axis rail.
      There is a trick to get it to work perfectly, which i do on all of the printers that i assemble.
      You need to loosen both plates from the x gantry, then get the left and right wheel groups right, then retighten the x gantry extrusion onto the plates.
      It's a complicated procedure. Creality either doesn't understand the concepts, or they don't bother putting it in their manual because it's confusing.
      Having dual z lead screws compensates for the poor design.
      Any part of a mechanical assembly has 6 degrees of freedom (x,y,z, and rotational x,y,z). Ender 2 has 2 degrees that are weak(up/down, forward/backward), Ender 3 has 1 degree that is weak (up/down), and dual z machines have no clear weaknesses.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад +1

      Not sure on the temps, the refrigerator magnet sheets so working at a stone point. Would rather do 90+ on a glass bed

    • @Barlos69
      @Barlos69 Год назад

      @@kristian6087 I don't but I run it next to a window with fans running

    • @Barlos69
      @Barlos69 Год назад

      ​@@NathanBuildsRobots I don't mind glass however, I switched to pei and don't intend on going back(I have an extra magnet and pei sheet I could cut and switch in place of the stock "fridge magnet"). I was also thinking about running an ender 2 with the ender 3 motherboard to bypass the temp problems, not sure if this would give me issue. also toying around with petg to see if it can replace my go to filament, Polymaker asa.

  • @Sebastian-mk1pj
    @Sebastian-mk1pj 2 месяца назад

    There is no final form 😄

  • @natereinhold6180
    @natereinhold6180 Год назад +1

    Waaaaay too much thermal paste! The voids left between threads once tightened is so minimal that you just make a huge mess and waste most of the paste when using that much.

    • @NathanBuildsRobots
      @NathanBuildsRobots  Год назад

      Debatable! If I get 1.5%more performance and it costs me $0.50 more in thermal paste, that is a price I will pay any day of the week!

    • @natereinhold6180
      @natereinhold6180 Год назад

      @@NathanBuildsRobots 1.5% more performance from globbed on and making a mess that has to be wiped off (not to mention the contamination from what got squeezed out internally) vs the proper amount? That's debatable! You can only increase heat transfer based on surface area, that's what the paste does, once the voids are filled, no more can be had by using more.

  • @ps3customgamer
    @ps3customgamer 3 месяца назад

    Waste of time. If you had bought a bimetal heat break you would have increased the melt zone and have had significantly better temperature control.

  • @user-fp7wy6kb1k
    @user-fp7wy6kb1k Год назад

    wtf did i just watch, thats some low level macgyver stuff...