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I shared a video of the problem, it's hard to describe with words. Can you help me solve it?

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[-] JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

I am using 200deg, which is between the 180 and 210deg said on the spool. I am using this PLA filament . I don't know what it means to check tension (sorry I am a noob), or how to check if my nozzle's clogged. I was able to insert the needle that came with my printer into the nozzle halfway however.

[-] asmuch@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

Temperature: Bump your temperature up 10 degrees and see if it changes, if you have a thermometer check if your heating block to see if it is actually at the set temp.

Tension: here’s a good article about it

https://filament2print.com/gb/blog/141_3d-printing-extrusion-systems.html

Though looking at your video again, it looks like it’s gripping, but the wheel isn’t spinning. This is what’s leading me to something not allowing it to pass through the nozzle. If that wheel isn’t spinning, then it’s probably not an inability to grip but the stepper motor skipping because it can’t push the filament through the nozzle for some reason.

If your temps seem to be calibrated properly next step I would take is to remove your nozzle (while hot) and see if filament is able to be pushed through.

[-] JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago

I looked through the article and I think I have a direct printer head. I tried changing the temperature even 20deg, and nothing changed. The wheel would spin properly when I tried it without filament. I unfortunately don't have a thermometer. I will try and change the nozzle if I have to, but it looks like a complex procedure and I don't want to mess anything up.

[-] galaxi@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Changing the nozzle isn't hard, you just have to be careful. All you have to do is heat up the hotend, hold the heater block with a wrench, and use another wrench to unscrew the nozzle (you might've gotten one with your printer for this). Holding the heater block is mostly just important imo so that the torque doesn't misalign other parts in your hotend. Remember that if you're facing down, then screwing directions are reversed. So you would unscrew the nozzle clockwise (righty loosey).

After you get the nozzle off, I would push some filament through the top to get your clog out. Then you can put the same nozzle back on. The main time you would need to replace it is if you're consistently having issues even after that or you've been using it for a while (the hole gets worn through bigger over time). You can also look into doing a 'cold pull' to get out clogs.

Of course your extruder would still work fine if you didn't have anything in it because it's only jamming due to trying to push something through a clog :p You have 2 zones in a hotend: the cold end (radiator) and hot end (heater block). Sometimes a clog can happen because of heat creep, where a bit of hot melted filament gets retracted up into the cold zone and resolidifies there, blocking the passage.

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this post was submitted on 25 Aug 2023
23 points (100.0% liked)

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