


Link is brokeninsanely cheap pla/abs/petg 10kg packs. -$45 currently. takes about 2 weeks to arrive.
Blipped right up for me.Link is broken
it also didn't work for me, gives me some tradetracker.com error. But I was able to find it.... tempted to give it a try... it's cheap enough it's hard to go too wrong and if it prints like **** ya throw it out
insanely cheap pla/abs/petg 10kg packs. -$45 currently. takes about 2 weeks to arrive.
i got $300 worth on the way so...
but im like 80% sure i know the factory its coming from.
The colors and spool images are very similar to iiidmax, I've had good success with their PLA but don't like their PETG even when dried....for half the price a kilo I'm in for 20 spools of the PLA to see what I think.
This should be interesting...got a tracking number for FedEx on my order....FedEx is saying they have it, it's in Georgia, package weight is 7kg (order is 20 spools at 1kg each) and it's going to Michigan...not Nebraska. Suspecting they may be "reusing" FedEx tracking numbers to get items into shipped status earlier assumingly so it releases money....but will give it a week or two and see what happens.
I've found it works better with a direct-drive extruder. I swapped a bondtech extruder onto the e3d v6 hot end on my CR-10 some time ago for that reason. It does fine with TPU at 50mm/s speeds (dunno what 3mm^3/sec means, I use Cura as a slicer, and it takes linear speeds when slicing).First time printing TPU.
--will destroy PEI. Use glue stick on a surface you don't mind destroying
--needs filament drying. Mine was bubbly right out of the shrink wrap
--can't push it. I switched to a 0.6 nozzle to keep pressure low and kept flow to 3mm^3/sec.
--counterintuitively can't use high retraction. I reduced my retraction and retraction speed.
I'm pretty happy to be able to print squishy things.
3 cubic millimeters per second.dunno what 3mm^3/sec means
I've found it works better with a direct-drive extruder. I swapped a bondtech extruder onto the e3d v6 hot end on my CR-10 some time ago for that reason. It does fine with TPU at 50mm/s speeds (dunno what 3mm^3/sec means, I use Cura as a slicer, and it takes linear speeds when slicing).
Since like 95% of the consumer space printers use 1.75mm filament, 50mm/s does mean something. In your numbers, 50mm/s on 1.75mm filament, works out to 120 cubic millimeters/second.50mm/s means nothing in terms of plastic flow rate. It could be very high in the case of a big line, or very low in the case of small line. What matters for nozzle pressure and melt-rate is the volumetric flow. That's how hard the extruder has to push on the plastic and how fast the plastic has to melt. Since TPU is squishy, you can't push it hard.
I found multiple sources online that said 3mm^3/sec is a typical flow rate for TPU and that worked for me. It definitely didn't work at all at my normal flow rates.
A standard hotend will melt at most 10mm^3/sec well. A "high flow" hotend will melt 20 or so. I push my Volcano up to 25mm^2 when printing with a 0.8 nozzle but I also increase the temperature to partly compensate.
Cura doesn't let you set your speeds by volumetric flow, because Cura ***** and things like that are one of the reasons I'm thinking about switching slicers. The only flow control Cura gives you is to go into preview mode and switch the coloring to "flow", and then match up the colors. You have to manually re-slice and re-check the flow rate. Flow and the ability to cap max flow is critical when printing fast or printing big parts.
So what you're saying is that you've given a measure that nobody uses in designing or slicing, but we all **** for using the thing that we can adjust. Not super helpful.You are confusing parameters. Neither Cura nor any other slicer allows you to set the filament feed rate as an independent parameter. Filament feed rate is calculated by the slicer based on a myriad of other parameters and is an outcome of the process. Slicers and printers don't even display the filament feed rate usually. And furthermore, a filament feed rate of 50mm/s wouldn't be physically possible on any printer. That would be a volumetric flow rate of over 120mm^3s which no hotend can achieve because fundamental limits of the plastic thermal conductivity and even if you could, you couldn't cool it back down fast enough to make a real print.
Can you look at your top layer in the preview window, does it start on the right side?
I'm curious if it's from an incomplete purge
Currently travel is showing it leaving the print tower and going to the left side but the item isn't in the same location as it was when I printed it yesterday so your though could be correct.Can you look at your top layer in the preview window, does it start on the right side?
I'm curious if it's from an incomplete purge
Tower is on, not flushing into objects infill.This would be my first step. Do you have the purge tower on or are you purging into the infill? You can adjust the purge volume and when going from black to white may need to bump that up in order to prevent this (if that's what it is)
You can buy a lot of brass nozzles for the cost of a nice one.
What "craps out" about them?
Just frustrated I guess. I've only been at this a couple of months as a hobby and I print a boatload due to retirement. I print PLA and PLA metallics & silk. After a nozzle swap, cleaning, and re-level all is well. I'm working on Xmas stuff for the grands.What "craps out" about them?
I'm in the cheap brass nozzles camp. I change them any time I change filament types instead of trying to flush all the old filament out. I used to put them in a little baggy labeled "PETG" or whatever so I could switch back to them, but for $0.50 each, I just toss them as a consumable now. People say they wear out, but I've never had it happen....besides if my 0.4mm nozzle became 0.5mm, I probably would never notice because I always print lines 120-200% of the nominal nozzle width anyway, so accuracy of the hole is practically irrelevant.

I've also had mysterious print problems that went away by changing the nozzle. Like stringing or blobbing that shouldn't happen, change nozzle and it's inexplicably better. All the more reason not to spend $30 on some fancy nozzle IMO.