Does This make Volcano Hotends Obsolete? Bondtech CHT Review

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 966

  • @CNCKitchen
    @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +83

    Does the CHT nozzles make high-flow hotends obsolete?
    Don't forget to share this video and check out our Original CNC Kitchen Inserts (Affiliate & EU Only): geni.us/CNCKitchenInserts

    • @theheadone
      @theheadone 3 года назад +3

      I hope that they eventually make one suitable for printing carbon fiber filament (and 0.4mm). I almost exclusively use that for my job.

    • @dreamcat4
      @dreamcat4 3 года назад +8

      ah but Stephan! surely a CHT Volcano nozzle would be even better then right? well it seems Bondtech are still working on that one in the lab. machining so much deeper down a longer nozzle. it must prove to be rather challenging. but we will see if that ever happens. a big maybe. hehe. ok i will go watch your video now :)

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад +22

      Hi Stefan. Great video, as usual. We will release the 0.4 beginning of November. Design is ready. Manufacturing starts Monday. MK8 versions will follow. We are also working on the Volcano. This one, still a question mark. A maybe for now. We will have abrasive proof nozzles later.

    • @schm4704
      @schm4704 3 года назад +1

      I think the main appeal is the ease of changing between regular, .4 mm x .2 mm stuff, and the occasional bigger print without changing heater blocks.

    • @CapnCoconuts
      @CapnCoconuts 3 года назад +1

      Can you block Kitan Mani? The bot's spamming porn links all over your comments section.

  • @MakersMuse
    @MakersMuse 3 года назад +688

    I honestly thought this was another snake oil 3D Printer "hop up" part that looks flashy but has minimal effect. I'm so glad I was wrong, the tests don't lie!

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +78

      Indeed! I had an eye on the Matchless nozzles for years thought heard mixed reviews. This is IMO another small revolution I was desperately looking for!

    • @peetersm
      @peetersm 3 года назад +23

      @@CNCKitchen I have been using a 2.0mm solex for years, I agree this it is amazing. Not sure why bondtech seems to get all the credit for something that is not even theirs. Also Solex makes a 0.4mm like you want.

    • @Robin-Visser
      @Robin-Visser 3 года назад +6

      Correct. Videos and reviews on internet never lie😅

    • @eclsnowman
      @eclsnowman 3 года назад +15

      @@peetersm not so much them getting credit, Bondtech has been selling 3dSolex nozzles for years. In fact I think they were one of the largest sellers of his products. And so they partnered together to use Bondtech's manufacturing abilities to bring them to market at an affordable price. I don't really see the problem.

    • @TheMidnightSmith
      @TheMidnightSmith 3 года назад +5

      I like big nozzles and I cannot lie! 😜

  • @properprinting
    @properprinting 3 года назад +291

    Awesome how you reverse engineered it and showed the animated manufacturing process. This makes your story so clear! Time to get one of these nozzles now :D

    • @ronnetgrazer362
      @ronnetgrazer362 3 года назад +9

      Typical CNC Kitchen thoroughness and quality!

    • @haka8702
      @haka8702 3 года назад

      The patent explains the manufacturing process ..

  • @Nordern
    @Nordern 3 года назад +224

    Ordered one, considering the price & compared to other "high quality" nozzles, the price is about the same in Norway, rather buy these for high flow applications/prints rather than conventional , expensive ones!

    • @Doktoreq
      @Doktoreq 3 года назад +9

      Nordern, you 3d print??

    • @Nordern
      @Nordern 3 года назад +20

      @@Doktoreq You can hear my Ender 3 in the background of older videos, before i got a BTT 32bit Board for it
      So yes, i do! quite a lot actually

    • @jakeengland1430
      @jakeengland1430 3 года назад +4

      @@Nordern i swear i see you everywhere dude in the most unexpected of places

    • @Nordern
      @Nordern 3 года назад +12

      @@jakeengland1430 checkmark go brrr

    • @thanhavictus
      @thanhavictus 3 года назад

      Have you tried air brush nozzles?

  • @StefanGotteswinter
    @StefanGotteswinter 3 года назад +25

    13:19 The surfacefinish in the diagonal bores (other would call it chatter) breaks my heart.

    • @mal-t
      @mal-t 3 года назад +7

      Thats just more surface area 😀 😉

    • @cooperised
      @cooperised 3 года назад +2

      Clash of worlds! Go on, do a video showing us how you'd make one, Stefan. For science. 😁

  • @CapnCoconuts
    @CapnCoconuts 3 года назад +266

    The whole Volcano hotend isn't obsolete, it's just the nozzles. Let Bondtech make a Volcano-compatible CHT nozzle and give the Supervolcano a run for its money. A Volcano nozzle that can print just as much as a brass Supervolcano nozzle would save a lot of space on the Z axis.

    • @MauDib
      @MauDib 3 года назад +2

      Exactly!

    • @F2_CPB
      @F2_CPB 3 года назад +27

      Toss in a Bi-Metal heatbreak or maybe with one of Slice Engineering hotends
      ~it's all fun and game until you realize. You exceeded limits of your motion system eons ago. I guess time to go voron!~

    • @shadow7037932
      @shadow7037932 3 года назад +9

      @@F2_CPB Voron/RailCore is the way to go if you can spend the money.

    • @nobodynoone2500
      @nobodynoone2500 3 года назад

      Depends what on whoever owns the rights wants to do.

    • @tonytober
      @tonytober 3 года назад +14

      Volcano is eh. Super Volcano is a mess. The whole heating block is helt by a pityful small heatbreak, and it just shears with fatigue due to carriage movement induced forces.

  • @angrmgmt
    @angrmgmt 3 года назад +15

    Got the 0.6 last week and it was surely impressive, and got the 0.4 yesterday and I must say that the print quality is superb with that one. The hype is real, these are amazing nozzles.

    • @GiorgosLysigakis
      @GiorgosLysigakis 2 года назад +1

      How did it help with speeding up your prints? Made a new profile in your slicer?

  • @marsgizmo
    @marsgizmo 3 года назад +60

    Thanks so much for the comprehensive analysis Stefan, wonderfully explained! 👏😌

  • @MirageC
    @MirageC 3 года назад +58

    Awesome review! complete, instructive and detailed! We can now fully appreciate the qualities of the CHT nozzle. Fantastic video! Thank you!

    • @ChristianDybdahlXTR
      @ChristianDybdahlXTR 3 года назад

      But the volcano is still just as good, the material is a variable here in his tests. So a volcano brass nozzle compared to the tinned CHT isn't that comparable unfortunately, so you'll save a minor amount of weight as the advantage and print height. But you also bought titanium bolts etc, so. Love your work as well, I like the dedication.

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj 3 года назад +1

      OK, there you go printing at 2m/s eh?
      Yes. Meters per second. You all that don't know MirageC go check his channel and you'll see what I mean.

  • @Vez3D
    @Vez3D 3 года назад +42

    Awesome vid as usual. I came to the same conclusions on these. Very awesome results just for a nozzle..gold work Stefan

    • @TheNamelessOne12357
      @TheNamelessOne12357 3 года назад +1

      So would this nozzle be enought at 1000 mm/s and 50000 mm/s2? :)

    • @Vez3D
      @Vez3D 3 года назад +2

      @@TheNamelessOne12357 there is more info needed to say yes. What hotend? What layer height? What nozzle size? What material...etc..etc..

    • @TheNamelessOne12357
      @TheNamelessOne12357 3 года назад

      @@Vez3D It's about your printer and your last high speed printing video. There was Magnum+, but will V6 with this nozzle handle same speed and same settings?

    • @Vez3D
      @Vez3D 3 года назад +3

      @@TheNamelessOne12357 no V6 will never be a m+ .. not even close

    • @Peter_Schluss-Mit-Lustig
      @Peter_Schluss-Mit-Lustig 3 года назад

      @@Vez3D i think he meant this nozzle used in the m+

  • @jamesbrown99991
    @jamesbrown99991 3 года назад +104

    This is already used in injection molding tips, sometimes called "tornado" tips. Is the only thing "new" in this patent the words "3D printer", rather than "injection molding machine"?

    • @mduckernz
      @mduckernz 3 года назад +13

      Sure seems that way huh. The core innovation involved is "improve melt rate", and that isn't new, as you said.

    • @jamesbrown99991
      @jamesbrown99991 3 года назад +16

      @@mduckernz I didn't check, but maybe it's an unexamined patent, only requiring examination if challenged. This would mean that prior art can be patented (until challenged).

    • @Double-X2-Points
      @Double-X2-Points 3 года назад

      The "words", and the fact that I don't own an "injection molding machine" to produce all of my original CAD designs.... In other words, you make it sound like the patent for a wheel on an airplane is not "new" because "wheels already have been used for iron horse drawn chariots" once upon a time....logic=50. Reasoning skill=0

    • @m3chanist
      @m3chanist 3 года назад +30

      @@Double-X2-Points Ridiculous comparison, logic=0, reasoning skill=0. You create a false equivalence. The similarity is not in regard to the name but to the art, you completely missed the poster's point, in fact getting it arse backward. This is the SAME technology with merely a different name.

    • @brianthwaites2397
      @brianthwaites2397 3 года назад +4

      It is the application that is innovative in much the same way that cyclonic particle extraction was adapted from alluvial mining technology for use in vacuum cleaners by Dyson

  • @horrovac
    @horrovac 3 года назад +44

    I'm wondering if (and how much) this kind of nozzle extrudes material of more uniform temperature, and whether this has an effect on the mechanical properties of the parts, even when not doing high-volume printing. I can well imagine that at the top end of performance of a standard nozzle the inner part of the flow is markedly colder than the part of the flow closer to the nozzle walls, causing internal stresses or even cracks. It might be the case that these nozzles not only allow you to print faster, but also produce stronger parts.

    • @MatthewBallinger
      @MatthewBallinger 3 года назад +8

      Agreed. Most of my prints are functional prints. Printing with a larger nozzle alone makes a huge difference in layer adhesion. My default is now 0.6mm and I was thinking of going to a 0.8mm. Now it's a no brainer. I can't wait for these to arrive!

  • @cabbagemerchant8506
    @cabbagemerchant8506 3 года назад +24

    Hope they start offering these in copper! With my Ender 3 simply switching to a copper nozzle added 50% flow but more importantly it DRASTICALLY improved layer adhesion with ABS due to the higher tip temperature. If I switch to a CHT I'll get big flow improvements but my layer adhesion with ABS will go back how it was (poor enough to rule out using ABS for mechanical parts)

    • @b4zz3d59
      @b4zz3d59 3 года назад +3

      Thanks for the tip.

    • @cabbagemerchant8506
      @cabbagemerchant8506 3 года назад

      @@b4zz3d59 LUL imagine one of these guys operating anything more complicated than a pickup truck

    • @flamestoyershadowkill
      @flamestoyershadowkill 3 года назад +1

      so the cooling becomes a bottleneck and you have to improve the cooling. Also you need to improve to movement system heavily

    • @cabbagemerchant8506
      @cabbagemerchant8506 3 года назад +2

      ​@@flamestoyershadowkill Cooling for sure. Ender3 movement isn't that bad if you have the luxury of not caring about surface finish. If you DO care about surface finish I highly recommend the polished nozzles available at 3D Passion.

    • @ev2477
      @ev2477 2 года назад +1

      It is copper.

  • @grahams5871
    @grahams5871 3 года назад +21

    Mill a slot in the nozzle with a width:height ratio of about 3:1. This appears to avoid the claims of the patent; should give equivalent improved heat transfer, and should be easier to clean when cold.
    For the deluxe version, drill two holes on either side of the milled slot and fill them with silver ( the most heat conductive metal )
    Use these ideas in combination with the volcano idea with the long nozzle which gives more time in contact with the heating source for a given speed, and cover the whole thing in an insulating sock.

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад +1

      Interesting ideas, but I suspect the engineering and production difficulties involved in the "fill with silver" idea would drive the costs beyond the Ruby nozzles and render it unsellable.

  • @eddietheengineer
    @eddietheengineer 3 года назад +34

    This is fantastic, really nice work and impressive results. I’m hoping they can eventually release a 0.4mm variant 👍🏼

    • @_RsX_
      @_RsX_ 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, but first I'd like to see a cold pull on a clogged 0.4mm nozzle 😀

    • @Blamm83
      @Blamm83 3 года назад

      They did today

  • @lukesmith9059
    @lukesmith9059 3 года назад +8

    Even for situations where the printer has some headroom before hitting extrusion limits, according to the charts these nozzles help keep performance consistent over a wider operating range. I wouldn't be surprised if these could help print quality even at medium-fast settings.
    Even with my prusa mk3, I get very close to extrusion limits on a 0.6mm nozzle when printing infill, as I usually tune infill to print as fast as possible. I have noticed with petg the infill can stop printing correctly, so perhaps these nozzles would help.

  • @andrewesquivel
    @andrewesquivel 3 года назад +17

    Everyone hates intellectual property patents until they come up with a good idea themselves.
    Still, expect some Chinese manufacturer to make a clone in the near future. They don't care about such legal things. (for example: anything from slice engineering)

    • @McStebb
      @McStebb 3 года назад +7

      This argument breaks down when corporate interests are allowed to lobby the government to extend the patent window and keep competition out of their market for longer and longer periods. It used to be 14 years, but they extended it to 20. And don't even get me started on what Disney has done with copyright law...

    • @randomidiot8142
      @randomidiot8142 3 года назад

      @@McStebb your argument breaks down when you're the one that's profiting off the lobbying and extended patent windows. You claim to hate it but I'd like to see how you'd feel if the shoe was on the other foot.

    • @Yes_it_is
      @Yes_it_is 2 года назад +1

      @@McStebb It breaks down even more once you consider people exploiting the patent system. This is a standard high flow extruder nozzle used in injection molding. The patent is for the use of these standard nozzles in 3D printing.
      I am all for protecting intellectual property, but what we have no is basically just calling dibs. This patent would almost certainly not hold up in court, but you would have to spend your own money and wait years for the court system to use it in a product; or more realistically, pay the troll a small amount less than the anticipated legal fees.

  • @Kevinjimtheone
    @Kevinjimtheone 3 года назад +7

    This is the kind of breakdown we like to see. Incredible level of detail. Well done.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +4

      Much appreciated! I felt bad destroying the good nozzles 😅

  • @bondtechab
    @bondtechab 3 года назад +1

    Bondtech CHT® RepRap and MK8 0.4mm is available to order and in stock. A bit earlier than the 5th of November we announced previously.

  • @MuitoDaora
    @MuitoDaora 3 года назад +129

    Good luck enforcing a patent outside the country where was granted.

    • @spezzy
      @spezzy 3 года назад +23

      Depends on if the countries are part of the Patent Cooperation Treaty

    • @maxhammick948
      @maxhammick948 3 года назад +16

      With US, EU, and WIPO patents there's only a few countries where it doesn't apply and you can't sell a knockoff anywhere interesting

    • @MuitoDaora
      @MuitoDaora 3 года назад +17

      @@maxhammick948 From WIPO website:
      Is a patent valid in every country?
      Patents are territorial rights. In general, the exclusive rights are only applicable in the country or region in which a patent has been filed and granted, in accordance with the law of that country or region.
      So highly dependent on the country's laws. And China does not participate.

    • @supersonic060
      @supersonic060 3 года назад +5

      patent office wins again.

    • @maxhammick948
      @maxhammick948 3 года назад +16

      ​@@MuitoDaora China signed the PCT in 1994. Even if they don't enforce it, trying to sell knockoff copies in the US or EU (or just about anywhere else) is likely to result in your goods being seized by customs

  • @nobodynoone2500
    @nobodynoone2500 3 года назад +33

    They just need to license it, and it seems like they are for a reasonable fee based on the end-price.. It's only a problem when they don't work reasonably with other companies. While I think information should be free, Inventors deserve reward for their insights and efforts. Seems a bit unfair to talk negatively of a patent holder who seems to be acting in good faith.

    • @cooperised
      @cooperised 3 года назад

      I think his comments were pretty well balanced. He acknowledged the good-faith actions of the patent holder, but that doesn't mean that he has to be in favour of patents generally in a market (home 3D printing) that's built on open-source hardware and has been held back and crippled by patents for decades.
      Patents put a lot of power in the hands of the patent holder and are more often used for market control than the protection of ideas. This patent holder seems decent but what if they decide to sell it (to save the costs of patent protection, for example), and it ends up in the hands of someone who hikes the licence cost to target the industrial market?

  • @scruffy3121
    @scruffy3121 3 года назад +15

    You could use ECM to erode a normal volcano nozzle to increase surface area and compare it.

    • @ismaelyu5
      @ismaelyu5 3 года назад

      Does ECM produce a flat enough surface?

    • @scruffy3121
      @scruffy3121 3 года назад +1

      @@ismaelyu5 it definetly can. But probably would need some experience and r&d

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +3

      EDM or an insert might be the only feasible option for the long Volcano nozzles. I'm excited to see what companies will come up with to make the parts also at a competitive price.

  • @itzBUMP
    @itzBUMP 3 года назад

    Nice production quality 2:48 the "g" matching up with two circles in the side of the nozzle was very aesthetically pleasing.

  • @WhereNerdyisCool
    @WhereNerdyisCool 3 года назад +13

    Interesting idea. Sad that some one patented it. Especially in an open source community like 3D printing

    • @randomidiot8142
      @randomidiot8142 3 года назад +1

      Yes, the choice to have the ability to protect your intellectual property and have the opportunity to get a return on the time and energy spent to develop an idea should definitely be stripped away.
      /S. No gain no pain.

    • @Yes_it_is
      @Yes_it_is 2 года назад +1

      @@randomidiot8142 Except if you look into it, they didn't invent anything. This is a standard nozzle used in injection molding. In other words, they patented the use of a standard high flow extruder for the use of 3d printing. They are just patent trolls that claimed existing technology so they could extort money out of companies.

  • @swademcYT
    @swademcYT 3 года назад +1

    An injection moulder I designed uses that exact concept for the extruder. It's a nice solution that makes clever use of thermal conductivity properties of metal vs plastic. I never thought to apply for a patent since the concept is pretty self evident from engineering principles when you're designing an extruder from scratch. Also you would most likely drill the deeper holes first because end mills aren't meant to be plunged.

    • @lucastonoli3256
      @lucastonoli3256 3 года назад +1

      The design has been a thing on injection molding machines for a good while. It's only a "breakthrough" of sort on 3D printers.

  • @Core3DTech
    @Core3DTech 3 года назад +10

    Cudos to Bondtech again!! True leader in real innovation. Great video as well. Thx, Stephan

    • @speedpu
      @speedpu 3 года назад

      Bondtech use this indentation, not invent.

    • @MrTimElmore
      @MrTimElmore 3 года назад +3

      @@speedpu Bondtech made some improvements on the 3D Solex design

    • @Core3DTech
      @Core3DTech 3 года назад +6

      true, but a "legitimate invention that ended up in an improved product". ruclips.net/video/UNJdv5bFGOg/видео.html The patent is wide ranging and after "properly" licensing it BondTech turned into to something better. Not to mention bringing it to Market affordably.

    • @SpeedFr3ak
      @SpeedFr3ak 3 года назад

      @@speedpu They wrote about it in their White paper on their homesite.

  • @huntliba
    @huntliba 3 года назад

    Thanks Stefan for showing what that nozzle is all about! Now I have to consider to I choose CHT vs Vanadium 1.6...

  • @ffoska
    @ffoska 3 года назад +22

    I mean, better/more contact between the filament and the hot end makes it melt faster... that is just common sense. It's like they patented a heat sink with wings, instead of a block of metal.
    Nice. now I want one made from hardened steel, with three intersecting triangular-conic cutouts. It could be easily machined with an EDM dye machine.

    • @DoRC
      @DoRC 3 года назад +6

      It would be possible to EDM but each nozzle would probably cost $100. EDM time is not cheap.

    • @titter3648
      @titter3648 3 года назад +3

      @@DoRC You cold pre drill it close in size, and then just EDM the rest. That way you get the EDM cycle time down and make it cheaper to manufacture.

    • @BikerCaf
      @BikerCaf 3 года назад +3

      @@DoRC 3D metal print the new nozzles. You'd then be able to have any internal nozzle geometry you like.

    • @DoRC
      @DoRC 3 года назад +2

      @@BikerCaf that would be sweet! But expensive

    • @BikerCaf
      @BikerCaf 3 года назад +1

      @@DoRC Everything is expensive to start with in manufacturing, but as any designer knows, once mass production gets going and nicely fine tuned and sorted it all becomes cheap as chips (usually without the buyers learning about such things).

  • @koenvanduffel2084
    @koenvanduffel2084 3 года назад +2

    I got a 1mm one in the post :). Combined with a Dragon high flow that should be good fun printing vases.
    I just read trough the patent a think they omitted an important part: you can make this same structure in the bottom part of an all metal heat break and achieve the same. For instance a high flow Dragon or Mosquito Magnum could get it and up their flow capability to super volcano levels. The standard flow Dragon or Mosquito probably can reach volcano performance this way. And when combining the CHT nozzle with "CHT Dragon" or "CHT Mosquito" maybe even a standard all metal hotend gets near to super volcano capabilities.
    Another advantage I see is that the heater block can be run at lower temperature as the plastic is anyway molten better/more homogeneously. This will deliver more consistent extrusion and I would not be surprised stronger parts too as the infill bits that are typically printed faster will be molten better and thus give better layer bonding - Do I see a future CNC Kitchen review? :) -

  • @originaltonywilk
    @originaltonywilk 3 года назад +11

    I thought it's be more effective to get heat into the melt by just drilling the core as large a diameter as possible then drilling two or three horizontal holes and fit pins in (before finishing the M6 thread). The melt would then have to flow over and around those horizontal bars.
    Hmm... shouldn't be too difficult to try in a home shop either.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +7

      A very good point! It's unfortunately covered by the patent but might still be worth trying out for a comparison.

    • @originaltonywilk
      @originaltonywilk 3 года назад

      @@CNCKitchen It may be an improvement over that patent for multiple horizontal (not diagonal) bars of specifically high thermal conductivity (e.g. plated copper or silver) claiming greater surface area and improved longitudinal mixing of the melt. Such an improvement may itself be patentable - not now of course 'cos it's public domain :)

    • @cooperised
      @cooperised 3 года назад

      Worth a try. Tapped holes and threaded studs might be the easiest to manufacture. Cold pulls would be impossible though...

  • @CydexPL
    @CydexPL 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for your contribution in 3d printing community! :)
    I'm not sure how about bigger CHT nozzles but I bought 0,4mm MK8 CHT for my ender 3 with bi-metal heatbreak from trianglelabs. I must say I'm very dissapointed by CHT (after that I'm not planning to buy bigger CHT and test it myself). I've run your flow tests and CHT nozzle doesn't improve possible flowrate. In fact I have worse outcome than on regular nozzle that costs me 1/10 of CHT, even on max-tighten screw for extruder spring. To be ohnest - bi-metal heatbreak didn't improve flowrate that much as I was expecting either. I have 2-5% improvement over stock heatbreak, but it helped to reduce retraction distance and retraction speed so I'm pretty happy with it.

  • @TheCarLovingSwede
    @TheCarLovingSwede 3 года назад +6

    This is amazing! This on a fast printer like a Voron will be a great combo 🙂

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +3

      Definitely! Looking forward to the 0.4 mm version for some SpeedBenchies.

    • @TheCarLovingSwede
      @TheCarLovingSwede 3 года назад +2

      @@CNCKitchen If they won't release a 0.4 mm version you will have to make your own 🙂

  • @NathanBuildsRobots
    @NathanBuildsRobots 3 года назад +1

    While the core might not directly conduct heat into the plastic, they increase flow rate near the walls of the heat transferring outside surfaces.
    Liquid cooling radiators try to increase shear rate near the walls to accelerate heat transfer, which is the closest engineering example I can think of.
    Very clever design and I want to get my hands on one! $20 is pretty reasonable. I wonder if a copper version will be released.

  • @pizzablender
    @pizzablender 3 года назад +11

    A 0.4 mm version would be nice to have.

    •  3 года назад +1

      Yes, pls pls. 0.6mm is nice for some printing but the oozing is unbearable in my opinion. I was daily driving a 0.6 until I got deadly tired of trying to get rid of stringing.

    • @tobiasstegmiller8725
      @tobiasstegmiller8725 3 года назад

      Bei 3DJake kann man die 0,4 nozzle vorbestellen.
      Wird ab dem 17.11 versendet.

  • @WeItenspinner
    @WeItenspinner 2 года назад

    I got one in 1.4 mm and use it for fast, but robust prints and I love it. The filament roll goes Brrrrrrrr.

  • @samonsthewise
    @samonsthewise 3 года назад +15

    you just sold 200 of these across the globe, i guarantee it.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +4

      I fear supply was already short before but many shops seem to be sold out.

  • @drfootleg
    @drfootleg 3 года назад

    Such a detailed and comprehensive look at this new design. It was a joy to watch.

  • @jonathanballoch
    @jonathanballoch 3 года назад +4

    As usual, very well researched. Though I am curious: Do you think, as you print many meters of filament, that the middle "cutting" edge of the nozzle dulls over time? if it does, do you think that would interfere with flow? Also, this innovation seems orthogonal to Volcano. Do you think they can get even more flow rate if the made a Volcano Clover?

  • @ChrisHarmon1
    @ChrisHarmon1 3 года назад +1

    I looked at all of the hotend designs over the years and really couldn't tell a major different besides maybe the large flat tip nozzles of the J-head leaving a nice top layer but with ironing it's now easy to get a perfect top layer with any nozzle. Then I thought short melt zone hotends might benefit from heating the center of the filament by splitting it apart. Glad I can test it now. To me there should be a pursuit for flow but also better print quality.

  • @tammyhollandaise
    @tammyhollandaise 3 года назад +3

    I've been wondering what would happen if you fed three 1.75mm filaments into a single 3.0mm extruder. This nozzle geometry would be perfect for it!

  • @Lineracing
    @Lineracing 3 года назад +1

    Great video! I wold guess filament clogging would be a bit more hazzle. But i definitly want to try this nozzle for high volume/fast prints!

  • @Boomtendo4tw
    @Boomtendo4tw 3 года назад +3

    Yeah splitting the filament makes more surface area. Like smaller ice cubes melting faster

  • @-robo-
    @-robo- 3 года назад +2

    Electrical Discharge Machining (EDM) is an easy way to make precision holes with minimal heat. I am working on a DIY EDM mill mounted to a 3D printer chassis. I just might try making a similar nozzle out of a stainless steel bolt. With EDM, any conductive material can be milled. Perhaps a titanium or even tungsten nozzle would be interesting. Combine this with DIY electroplating and a person could even mill a copper or brass nozzle and plate it with nickel. (Hi, I'm Rob and I am a RUclips addict.)

  • @anime_reference
    @anime_reference 3 года назад +5

    I'm done with 0.4mm nozzles. I don't see the point anymore after the rise of cheap resin machines. 0.6mm is a much better balance of speed and detail considering what FDM is capable of
    (but for what it's worth, I don't think I'll buy a CHT unless they make a non-brass one. I print with glitter and glow filaments pretty regularly)

  • @CliffStuff
    @CliffStuff 3 года назад

    Thanks for the video. Ordered one, installed it and I'm definitely able to print PETG at a faster rate. Put it in my CR6 and it's doing fine.

  • @benscottbongiben
    @benscottbongiben 3 года назад +8

    Very interesting. Would this along with a bimetallic heartbreak in a stock ender 3 hotend make it work similarly to other more expensive high flow hotends?

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +3

      Probably not, because the cheap one-sided feeder will be the limiting factor.

    • @benscottbongiben
      @benscottbongiben 3 года назад

      @@CNCKitchen by feeder do you mean the extruder?

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад

      @@benscottbongiben Yes he does.

    • @RCMlll
      @RCMlll 3 года назад

      @@CNCKitchen would be nice to see a comparison with a one-sided feeder vs dual-gear feeder on a stock ender 3 using the CHT 0.6 nozzle

  • @3DMusketeers
    @3DMusketeers 3 года назад

    Okay.. This is AWESOME! A v6 is so much easier to use than a volcano, especially with LONG bowden systems! Looks like a few of our machines will be getting an upgrade! Great work!

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 3 года назад +4

    Take a nozzle blank, cross-drill some .020" holes, solder some strands of fine copper wire across the orifice, cut the threads, off you go. Or run a spike of material from the top of the orifice to create a toroidal chamber. Lots of ways to pet a cat here.

    • @josephoye2883
      @josephoye2883 3 года назад

      but who has time to do that when someone has a great nozzle to do it for $20. I cannot do that kind of work for lest than $20 of my time.

    • @gcod3d161
      @gcod3d161 3 года назад

      Or use a fine mesh screen above the threads

    • @rauldelgadillo8447
      @rauldelgadillo8447 2 года назад

      Yo he did just that too

  • @Odyseja2011
    @Odyseja2011 3 года назад

    Glad there are ppl here making so thorough tests.

  • @BeefIngot
    @BeefIngot 3 года назад +3

    I have to wonder if a copper plated volcano nozzle wouldn't beat this out

    • @CrashPCcz
      @CrashPCcz 3 года назад

      It wouldn't. Copper plated nozzle does 10% more. Tested it.

  • @duediligence791
    @duediligence791 Год назад +1

    It doesn’t restrain flow because its hot and it splits up the material using a tri blade wedge.
    This actually prevents clogging by breaking down the filament faster and having an anti clogging effect thats similar to a log splitter.
    When a log splitter presses a log through one half goes each way juts like a tri blade splits it in 1/3rds, or a 4 blade into 1/4’s.
    This process takes less effort and in turn less likely to have clogs or filament jamming.
    This assumes that your equipment is also complimentary but it doesn’t disregard some of the quirks of a 3 inlet design that are overcome by a 4 core design. Length of nozzle also matters. Some designs are not welcome for all printer extruders without further engineering.
    I designed my own nozzles several years ago with a unique extruder design I machined on my CNC and it uses a quad core design with a different core material and this allows finer tip nozzles to be used at higher speeds for greater flow and print detail. This also allows filaments like ninja flex to work in a Bowden.

  • @DOGMA1138
    @DOGMA1138 3 года назад +7

    Whilst it maybe "novel" for 3D printing it's a pretty standard design for hot runners used for injection molding, I'm actually surprised that no one has copied a hot runner design yet for the entire hotend set up outside of maybe some industrial pellet based 3d printers. Tho I strongly suspect the new E3D hotend did just that especially with its sleeve heating element.

    • @torpedan
      @torpedan 3 года назад +1

      To be truly fair, applying a near copy of technology from one field to another often is novel and patentable (and an easy source for ideas.) I am not a lawyer, which clearly makes me an expert, but in this case the claims in the patent for the most part focus on putting a piece of conductive material into the nozzle itself as opposed to a creative hole pattern in the nozzle. 9 & 14 or 17 & 23 may actually apply to what they are doing, and there is a decent argument for prior art for those, but it really would depend on if someone is willing to spend the time and money on parts that will be sold for penny profits.

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 3 года назад

      so just sell something "made for injection moulding" that coincidentally fits in a 3d printer nozzle

    • @torpedan
      @torpedan 3 года назад +1

      @@tommihommi1 miniature replica injection molding machines would be an interesting hobby.
      They make this mistake in claim 23 of explicitly saying drilled, so if the shape was something not formed by drilling it sort of side steps the whole thing. The same effect could be had by making it one unusually shaped hole instead of multiple holes. Most patents have holes in them that get missed which is one of the reasons why you end up with products with more than a dozen patents for similar stuff.

    • @nobodynoone2500
      @nobodynoone2500 3 года назад

      @@torpedan Would you be able to maintain that drilling isn't a blanket term for creating a hole? Is EDM drilling? Many will say yes, perhaps enough to make it difficult to side-step. Casting sounds good, but you will still have to finish (drill/machine whatever wordplay you want to use) the holes. Is not as simple as using a different process for an identical result in most cases.

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 3 года назад

      @@nobodynoone2500 finishing is different than creating the holes in the first place.

  • @TomDetka
    @TomDetka 3 года назад

    I got one of the 0.8mm nozzles right after watching your review. I was able to take a print that normally takes ~35 min (with standard 0.8mm) down to ~20 min.

  • @75echo
    @75echo 3 года назад +5

    Ok i can see the theory behind it but then, a straight bore is easy to clear any blockage with a needle, this will be impossible to do with the new design because of the fan-like bevels inside.

  • @schm4704
    @schm4704 3 года назад

    Thanks! I got mine yesterday after seeing this video, and I think my Volcano hotend will see a lot less use now since I can really print with bigger nozzles at the same flow rates, but with a regular V6.

  • @cander58
    @cander58 3 года назад +6

    This should increase friction in the nozzle end. Id like to see a test using flexible filament.

    • @InsideAlan
      @InsideAlan 3 года назад +1

      There's a trade off between the surface friction and the higher fluidity of higher temp extrusion.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  3 года назад +4

      Very good point I didn't think of while filming. Might try that out at some point.

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад +4

      There is no meaningful gain when using the Bondtech CHT nozzles with flexible filaments. Our tests show little or no increase in volumetric flow rate.

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад

      @@nunosantiago6720 Thanks for the reply! I was thinking that the better melting would allow reducing the heat slightly to help prevent heatbreak clogging. Sad to hear there's no flow improvement with flex. Make a nozzle that improves flex flow and people will kiss your feet, LOL!

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад

      @@mickmouse2258 we will keep your feedback in mind. Thank you.

  • @WilkoVehreke
    @WilkoVehreke 3 года назад

    I wasn't expecting this result. Great video. Thanks for making and sharing.

  • @OMGWTFBBQSHEEP
    @OMGWTFBBQSHEEP 3 года назад +4

    Doing a cold pull to remove debris in the nozzle could be a challenge with this design.

  • @marhar2
    @marhar2 3 года назад

    Super interesting overview! Your cutaway and reverse engineered model made it clear how it worked, and your explanation of the heat transfer was very informative.

  • @robson668
    @robson668 3 года назад +4

    One needs to design a nozzle with 4 holes to bypass the patent ;-)

    • @ffoska
      @ffoska 3 года назад +1

      Also if you are a chinese manufacturer, the patent is more like a suggestion... so no worries

    • @syber-space
      @syber-space 3 года назад

      @@ffoska 4-hole nozzle on a Dragon would be awesome... Might stick one of these on a Dragon anyway (still have a few sitting around somewhere...)

    • @hbgl8889
      @hbgl8889 3 года назад

      Patent lawyers usually make the patent claim as broad as possible to account for stuff like that. It is really crippling the industry.

    • @nobodynoone2500
      @nobodynoone2500 3 года назад

      That's generally not how patents work. I'll eat my hat if they didn't just define it as a multiple hole extrusion unit.

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад

      @@nobodynoone2500 Yes, it is for 2 or more holes.

  • @claudehebert3131
    @claudehebert3131 3 года назад +1

    A full-tungsten nozzle like this one could be interesting; could print abrasive materials or increase speed while printing regular materials (increased thermal mass).
    I'd also be interested in a 0.4mm nozzle.

  • @schm4704
    @schm4704 3 года назад +1

    Great video, thanks! This again is way more interesting than the usual "here's a new Ender 3 clone" stuff in the 3d printing bubble.

  • @tamiamibusch
    @tamiamibusch 3 года назад +4

    I think engineers/developers/companies are tired of spending money on R/D of new products or ideas only to be under cut on price by some no-name manufacturer when they go open source. If the 3d printing community wants open source products to continue they need figure out how to pay for the development cost of those products. People have to eat and R/D cost real money.

  • @rustybucket2248
    @rustybucket2248 3 года назад +2

    Great content as always Thank you. I would love to see how the CHT works with a Bowden setup. Retracts are more critical and I wonder about reliability. CoreXY seems to be where the Performance can be used to it’s maximum.

  • @Bakamoichigei
    @Bakamoichigei 3 года назад

    It's a beautifully elegant design. It _would_ be nice to see some CHT nozzles with 'normal' diameters, for use cases where the improved heating characteristics would be as much an advantage as the high-flow is in other situations.

  • @hollywafflez4722
    @hollywafflez4722 3 года назад

    I love that you showed your face in this video! It's great to see whose talking!

  • @imabeapirate
    @imabeapirate 3 года назад

    Your english has improved at an incredible rate mate. It's been brilliant watching you grow!

  • @UbuntuBirdyMovies
    @UbuntuBirdyMovies 3 года назад

    Forget about the 0.4 nozzle. I tested the 0.4 Matchless Nozzle which you mentioned. It was a dream at first but a nightmare at least. It clogged very often until I gave up and drilled them out like you did with the CHT...

  • @MultiRalvarado
    @MultiRalvarado 2 года назад

    I worked on Injection Molding for years and we used similar nozzles with that. Improves the mixing of the colorants with plastic and flow. But in injection molding we are pushing material at thousands of pounds. On 3d printing could help on the flow…

  • @spikekent
    @spikekent 3 года назад

    Looks like these will fit my Micro Swiss hotend on the Borg. Lets hope I can get one delivered here. Great review Stefan.

  • @DWIT3D
    @DWIT3D 2 года назад

    Just got the 5-pack. Looking forward to trying them out on my 500mm V-Core 3! Thanks Stefan.

  • @BrianAnim
    @BrianAnim 3 года назад +2

    What I was hoping you were going to answer is, how it's loaded. Do you use three different filaments or does it split them then pull them back together?

  • @pleighto77
    @pleighto77 3 года назад

    Stephan. I just ordered a 0.4mm one and will let you know when I get it, and how well it seems to work for at least my PLA that I am using at the moment.

  • @SylvieTheBagel
    @SylvieTheBagel 2 года назад +1

    So when do we get a CHT volcano nozzle? Sounds super fun, and perfect for ultra high speed printing, but not overly hard to achieve.

  •  Год назад +2

    We have 3D printing because patent expired. Wonder how many amazing technology are behind all these patents.

  • @scarecrow5848
    @scarecrow5848 Год назад

    There's also now a volcano CHT hot-end! its pretty cool!

  • @wordreet
    @wordreet 3 года назад +1

    Super interesting Stefan my man! I se a 0.6 all the time these days, so I'll be buying one of these right away!

  • @P0LTAT0
    @P0LTAT0 3 года назад +2

    Intro is Shakedown by Gavin Luke/ Jules Gaia for those who are interested

  • @jonasj2896
    @jonasj2896 3 года назад

    I ended up buying one of these at 0.6 size. Using it with a Micro Swiss Direct Drive and Hotend upgrade on an ender 3 v2. It feels like my printer is far more capable than I even understand myself.

  • @maxmustermann2596
    @maxmustermann2596 3 года назад +2

    Wow, I usually respect CNC Kitchens work most for the discipline he shows. I think the material tests are outstanding and the go-to address if research for materials for FDM printers is needed.
    This time I really liked the reverse engineering of the concept, which went into the design.
    However, I wondered how splitting the material works as well, if it might be relatively hard at that point. Does it mean, that getting it to soften is easy, but getting it hot enough to squeeze through a tiny hole is the hard part? Then, the concept should have an even bigger advantage for smaller nozzles, shouldn't it?
    P.S.: Sometimes I really like some of his innovations, too. However, it always seems, that solid engineering is his strong point.

  • @REDxFROG
    @REDxFROG 3 года назад +1

    I have one 0.60mm on my modded CR10 (Bondtech direct drive) since a few days. Prints crazy fast now!! Love it!!!
    But I wouldn't use a 0.60mm if I only had 1 printer. It's too wide. But great for functional parts.

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад +1

      Great to hear, I have a heavily modded CR-10S with a Bondtech DD too. I'm working on a project where a 0.6mm would be perfect.

    • @REDxFROG
      @REDxFROG 3 года назад

      @@mickmouse2258 if you want it even faster (big and strong parts) at the same time maybe try 0.8. the infill has such thick lines it wouldn't need a lot of infill %.

  • @arthurmorgan8966
    @arthurmorgan8966 3 года назад

    I switched to volcano on my bowden corexy printer, retractions and oozing have been a problem since. Regular block was working with no problems. This might be good in a way that you just plug and play, you don’t need to adjust/recalibrate everything like probe distance, fan duct distance or shape, retractions

  • @JakobDam
    @JakobDam 2 года назад

    After seeing your review here, I was so intrigued I ordered it immediately. I saw it in early Januar this year and received it late January. Today, I just installed it and wow... you say: "Will this become the new standard for how 3D printing nozzles will look? I'm quite sure, no..." -- I don't disagree with your reasoning, but I will say that it SHOULD be.
    I have a fairly fast delta printer with a crappy E3D V6 clone hotend, which due to the delta bed, isn't easy to change with something larger such as the Volcano hotend. With E3D Nozzle X, my printer can actually only deliver 9 mm2/s. Which is a sad and low number, and it does become an issue in print jobs with no traveling, i.e. continous extrusion - such as in vase mode. My printer can easily go 120 mm/s reliably with 5500 mm/s acceleration and 25 mm/s jerk. But with either the standard brass nozzles or the E3D nozzle X, I need to go down to 70 mm/s in vase mode (continous extrusion).
    Today I've begun testing the CHT nozzle (0.4mm) - fitted on my delta printer without any modifications. Just a nozzle swap. At 15 mm/s2 volumetric speed, I go at around 130 mm/s and I can probably go even higher. That's amazing - because now I can print my vases with 0.58mm width and 0.2mm layer height at 130-140 mm/s, without the walls getting thinner or having holes in them.
    I could of course also try the 0.6mm CHT nozzle and see if I can still go that fast, but I print a lot of different things, so the 0.4mm is a nice size for me; I can do fairly detailed stuff with high surface quality at around 100-120 mm/s, or I can ramp up the print speed to 130-140 mm/s and have fast drafts. Well, actually the CHT delivers quite high quality in my vase mode tests at 130 mm/s so yeah, I'm a VERY happy camper.
    Even slower printers would benefit with the higher output, because eventually, people will want to print faster and modern printers are more likely to come with solid movement systems and solid frames that can withstand speeds at over 100 mm/s easily, even cartesian printers can go this high now - and with CoreXY becoming more used, much faster prints are possible.
    I don't mind paying the premium price for this nozzle; it's not worn down easily according to specs, so it's not like I need to change it as often as brass nozzles.
    Now I just have to hope that my extruder stepper motor won't overheat, because it's obviously working overtime ^_^

  • @melvin5312
    @melvin5312 3 года назад +1

    Great video and analysis of this nozzle. Unfortunately, they came out right after i bought a volcano hotend...

    • @arturofernandez8487
      @arturofernandez8487 3 года назад

      Well at least you have the platform ready for if they release a volcano compatible one

  • @WindCatcherRC
    @WindCatcherRC 3 года назад

    Thanks for a great video on this new technology. Overall it appears to have some great advantages, however there are some serious draw backs for me and why I won't upgrade to something like this. The first thing that comes to mind, and you covered for a moment, is the cold pull and cleaning. I also require hardened steel for the projects that I print. The last thing is that most of my work requires the 0.4mm nozzle. The difficulty in cleaning/cold pull is the biggest deal breaker.

  • @gabiold
    @gabiold 3 года назад

    My idea:
    I thought that one would not need a Volcano nozzle for a Volcano hotend, if one would make an insert into the heater block, which covers the half of the length, then you could use just regular V6 nozzles for Volcano.
    The plastic wouldn't care whether the insert part or the nozzle part heats it up, the nozzle is just required because of the precision orifice at it's tip.
    Improving it even further, based on this nozzle, one could make a cloverleaf insert for a Volcano hotend, the still use the standard V6 nozzle.
    Benefits:
    - no need to manufacture cloverleaf into a nozzle you throw away when the orifice is worn out, and the internal cloverleaf insert would last longer.
    - one could use any existing V6 style nozzle, with special coatings, Ruby tip, etc, while benefiting from better performance.

  • @laurencebrundrett9301
    @laurencebrundrett9301 3 года назад

    Just got my CHT 0.8mm nozzles yesterday for my i3mk3. So far working extremely well at 30 mm^3/s with PLA. Trying 40 mm^3/s next...

    • @laurencebrundrett9301
      @laurencebrundrett9301 3 года назад

      Wow - that filament sure goes fast... 40mm^3/s with a 0.8mm CHT nozzle works great with my favorite eSun PLA

  • @ukaszokapa6782
    @ukaszokapa6782 3 года назад

    That is quite an impressive analysis. Keep up the good job Stefan!

  • @xgeko2
    @xgeko2 3 года назад

    I have had the chance to buy 2 3d solex nozzles in the past with cht. I will say I had one of there 0.4mm nozzles and had it in a maxiwatt pro heater and it worked wonderfully I was able to print fast and maintain detail. I have also emailed bondtech about 3 weeks ago asking them to make a 0.5 and 0.4mm nozzle. I also have a .25 nozzle from 3d solex but it is a 2 way split not a 3.

  • @yzorgone
    @yzorgone 3 года назад

    I always thought of this concept. nice to see that this works.

  • @teardowndan5364
    @teardowndan5364 3 года назад

    The nozzle works on fundamentally the same principles as hollow extrusions, except the core is used to split filament so it can heat up more quickly instead of forming cavities.

  • @markgrantham6829
    @markgrantham6829 3 года назад

    In the injection moulding we have been using these type of nozzles for years

  • @TheChemicalWorkshop
    @TheChemicalWorkshop 3 года назад +1

    i got idea
    fill the nozzle with strong epoxy (preferbaly color it dark)
    drop the nozzle into hcl with peroxide (or preferably aqaua regia if you have access)
    now you got the inner structure

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад

      You just told China how to clone it ... ;-) (JK! I'm sure they know this already!)

  • @Musa2point0
    @Musa2point0 3 года назад +1

    Great video. You should further study hotend thermodynamics by testing thermal paste traditionally used on CPU heatsinks on the threads of the hotend.

    •  3 года назад

      Please do this. I've never used in and was very surprised when I saw it recommended.

    • @mickmouse2258
      @mickmouse2258 3 года назад

      It's routinely used on the heatbreak (COLD SIDE ONLY). I specifically contacted Artic (who makes thermal paste for CPU's) and one of their engineers told me to use MX-4 but suggested that breakdown would occur if used on the HOT parts (although specs show it's breakdown point above 'normal' 3D print temps, but not high temp stuff like PC). It's generally not recommended to use on nozzles or the hot part of the the heatbreaks, it could cause galling of the threads and prevent removal. That said, I'd LOVE to see this researched more!!

  • @michaelschaub
    @michaelschaub 3 года назад +1

    As always a wonderful review.
    What I do not understand are the large differences of your results compared to the bondtech documentation.
    Roughly said:
    +30% and +100% Are quite different results

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад

      We did also "free flow" tests but we didn't published those values because they differ substantially from the usable capacity. All our published results are actual "print results". Don't want in any way minor what Stefan did, but we saw actual "print results" as more relevant.

    • @nunosantiago6720
      @nunosantiago6720 3 года назад

      Also, when we say 30% more people are already thinking it is snake oil. Imagine 100% : )

    • @michaelschaub
      @michaelschaub 3 года назад

      @@nunosantiago6720 Thanks! That makes a lot of sense :-)

  • @duediligence791
    @duediligence791 Год назад

    It doesn’t restrain flow because its hot and it splits up the material using a tri blade wedge.
    This actually prevents clogging by breaking the down the filament faster and having an anti clogging effect thats similar to a log splitter.
    When a log splitter presses a log through one half goes each way juts like a tri blade splits it in 1/3rds, or a 4 blade into 1/4’s.
    This process takes less effort and in turn less likely to have clogs or filament jamming.
    This assumes that the teat of your equipment is also complimentary.

  • @ralmslb
    @ralmslb 3 года назад

    Very interesting way to find the limit of extrusion.
    I would love to see a printer calibration series from you

  • @NeilLund
    @NeilLund 2 года назад

    Some questions that came to mind as I was looking at the design.
    What about four wholes or 5? What about using steel instead of brass? What about a complete cone shape all the way to the tips exit point after the splitting point, instead of the filament butting up against the flat spot just inside the tip?

  • @reidn5185
    @reidn5185 2 года назад +1

    I'd be curious to see if CHT nozzles reduce internal stresses since it seems to more homogenously heat the filament. I'd assume that would theoretically mean less warping, especially after annealing.

  • @joeo6378
    @joeo6378 3 года назад

    YEESSS huge prints fast is what I need in my life.