I will start with the bad news. I broke my new nozzle. :-(
I am not sure what I am doing wrong. I wrapped it once hooked it up and it seemed to not be heating up very well. When I took it apart and looked at it I realized that I had wrapped the nichrome too close to the tip. I was directly heating the thermistor, and managed to crack the glass bead. :-(
You can see how close to the tip I wrapped the wire in this picture.
I then re-wrapped the heater with the nichrome more in the middle. And once again tested pushing the PLA through by hand first. It had some back pressure but I could push it through. So I hooked it up to the extruder and tried running it. It seemed to have some trouble (like it was not hot enough) so I turned the heat up from 180 to 190 and the filament started coming out like it did with my first nozzle (before it had failed). Then disaster... the nozzle slid out right before my eyes... it just slid all the way out, even with the pipe clamp on the PLA. Looking at the threads of the brass one can see that they are filled with PLA...
I guess I will have to try again. But it will probably be a few days as my schedule is getting a little full...
Now for the good news. (actually two bits of good news :-)
First my black-light post was picked up on Fabbaloo and Make: Online. Very cool :-)
Second I designed a wiring block for my Mendel that makes wiring the extruder to the boards much easier. Which has turned out to be a good thing since I have had to rewire several times and still may have several more...
As you can see it just press fits on the three screws closest to my boards. The coat hanger supports and guides the wires to the x carriage end. The idea being that the wires will ALWAYS be out of the way that way. I caught my stepper wires on my spool holder before... which can't happen with this setup.
You will notice that there is a 9 position terminal block, 4 are for the stepper, 2 for the heater, 2 for thermistor, and the last is just a spare ground. I also ran a 6 conductor ribbon cable for LEDs (five circuits with one ground). These are connected to the pins at the front and back: 2 circuits front, 2 back, and a third both front and back. Watch for some lighting in the near future...
I have not posted formal directions but someone could make one from these pictures. Once Willow is running again I may write up some directions.
Showing posts with label Bad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
Extruder Heater Problems...
I had my first major problem with my extruder. I had been having strange flow problems. As I tried to diagnose this I noticed that I had some PLA leakage and then suddenly my nozzle was jamming into my build plate!! Upon closer examination the nozzle had slipped out about 0.25"!!!
The polyimide tape was wrapped right up to the insulator before.
This picture clearly shows the threads that are white (from the teflon tape) that have jumped out.
After taking it all apart there was a large blob of PLA stuck in the insulator.
I was never very happy with how close the nichrome had to be to the insulator and have read several articles about alternative methods of holding the heater to the nozzle. So I thought I would try an alternative with a T-nut and a brace. Here are some pictures of this experiment.
I needed some sort of plate at the extruder to hold the screws to the plate by the heater. So I made this adapter plate that also turned my extruder. Because my insulator/nozzle combination was already marginally long enough I made a short extension from wood.
I then bolted it all together and re-wrapped the heater and tried it out. I had concerns about the heat-sink that the aluminum plate created. These concerns I believe were warranted as the plate got quiet hot. I was able to get the nozzle hot enough to manually push the filament through but had trouble trying to push it through with the extruder.
I still am not happy with how short the heater section is and do not like how hot the plate and the screws up to the extruder get. So rather than continue to struggle with this design I bought a new nozzle set (from reifsnyderb) and am going back to a more traditional design for now.
For now I am out of commission but hope to have it all back together soon and start printing again.
The polyimide tape was wrapped right up to the insulator before.
This picture clearly shows the threads that are white (from the teflon tape) that have jumped out.
After taking it all apart there was a large blob of PLA stuck in the insulator.
I was never very happy with how close the nichrome had to be to the insulator and have read several articles about alternative methods of holding the heater to the nozzle. So I thought I would try an alternative with a T-nut and a brace. Here are some pictures of this experiment.
I needed some sort of plate at the extruder to hold the screws to the plate by the heater. So I made this adapter plate that also turned my extruder. Because my insulator/nozzle combination was already marginally long enough I made a short extension from wood.
I then bolted it all together and re-wrapped the heater and tried it out. I had concerns about the heat-sink that the aluminum plate created. These concerns I believe were warranted as the plate got quiet hot. I was able to get the nozzle hot enough to manually push the filament through but had trouble trying to push it through with the extruder.
I still am not happy with how short the heater section is and do not like how hot the plate and the screws up to the extruder get. So rather than continue to struggle with this design I bought a new nozzle set (from reifsnyderb) and am going back to a more traditional design for now.
For now I am out of commission but hope to have it all back together soon and start printing again.
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