Choosing a Hotend
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 มิ.ย. 2020
- This turned out longer than i thought it would yet still doesnt cover everything, but i feel is enough to make a valid decision
www.vorondesign.com
Mosquito Hotend www.sliceengineering.com/
Triangle Labs Dragon/V6 trianglelab.aliexpress.com/
Torque Wrench I use www.thingiverse.com/thing:261... - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
Me, casually eating my cereal at 4am, watching this, while my volcano is heating for abs next to me.
Relatable
love this comment
@@jorgetucson8196 :3
As a user of the Mosquito hotend (with E3D's NozzleX) in a professional environment, I can honestly say that this combination is the most reliable hotend I have used in over 8 years of printing. It just works, doesn't jam, and is quite compact. I see no issues with the mount of the heat cartridge and sensor, nor the thermal paste. These components are virtually never changed. In fact, I believe that the heat cartridge has an extended life in this hotend because of the superior thermal contact.
As for the price...yes it is expensive....but it does work very well and eliminates one of the print quality variables in machine.
Should one buy a genuine Slice Engineering Mosquito or offshore clone? - I think it's important for all of us to support the kind of innovation Slice Engineering, E3D, Bondtech and others are bringing to the industry. These companies invest time and money bringing advances to market. In my humble opinion, I think everyone should purchase at least one brand-name product from these companies before considering a clone...
they are waaay overpriced, for its 1/2 price i would buy it without hesitation. dont tell me it woudlnt be profitable... Clones i bought work without problems as well, even magnum version with pla. almost forgot, they dont even include heater, thermistor, pasta or 0.5 dollar fan in the price. Joke.
If it was just double the price of a V6, it would be a solid maybe, but once you factor in heater, thermistor, its over 3.5x a full E3D V6 kit.
I'm all for supporting the original, more so for US made, but for $220? To me, that's a getting outside of the prosumer price range for a bare hotend. Even the overpriced Ultimaker print cartridge is half that price...
Hopefully Slice can figure out how to cost down manufacture and start getting in to volume production so they can survive past the startup phase.
@@j.g545 You pay for the engineers inventing it, copying it is easier. However, though I won't critizise the price I'll most likely also go with the cheaper one tbh, bc I'm living in a special zone where shipping to is expensive and the company isn't on AliExpress.
J.G paying for good jobs with benefits is expensive. That $220 pays for 1 engineer or machinist at about $22/hr plus benefits for 1 day. It does not cover overhead, materials, machine wear, etc.
How good of a job is $22/hr in your area? It’s ok for a machinist here in Ohio, but low for anyone experienced. And it’s way low for an engineer.
@@j.g545 You rather pay copy cat artists than the actual people employed putting time, effort and love into a product??
Wow, this was one of the best videos I've seen about 3D printing, and it was exactly what I needed to see. These exact 3 choices are what I was considering, and it really helped me choose. Now, to source my choice, and search your other videos for a similar video on extruders.
I don’t agree that much (and therefore i’m really sorry…) I will clarify some details on my opinion.
-at first of this tutorial i heard him saying that the three of them are evenly good and they’ve all got pros and cons. Naturally this is what all three manufacturers will appreciate in terms of commercial support of their products.
All good until here….
The thing that bothers me is that all of the sudden he started talking less happy about the fact how he experienced working with the V6 and besides that, he out of the blue starts crushing the E3D V6 version that was outdated (while almost in the same price range, witch is utterly ridiculous bs. I bought one for €25,- brand new and never had to pay the amount of money he mentioned approximately €60,- or the exact $70.- quoted)
Plus my opinion on the way of attachment to your 3d printer isn’t all that great but in reality not that flawlessly on both the dragon and the mosquito thanks to the design of the 3 very different heatsinks. So comparison of the picture painted was hugely exaggerated by his expertise. You can put just anything online these days apparently, in this case you have been informed wrongly by mounting points. You will have to stick with the amount of space between those two expensive ones and the cheap one for putting it out there boldest (yours truely did not tell us about the details of where we can find them, the amount of them and let alone all the different dimensions for measurements fitting it to the x-axle of our machines.
That was not even all that he mentioned, he suddenly had to take the terminology ‘Reprap printer’ wherever you don’t riddle his logics by putting a $70-$200 hotend to a $50 printer with a cheap knock off from the E3D manufacturing company. Thanks for kicking them in the guts again!!!
Flow or high flow capacity is the first time he is in the same ballpark as he should be from the get go…. Heatsinks he is also as neutral as he ment to be (hopefully.)
Looking back this complete video i strongly suspect him to be sponsored by the dragon or mosquito manufacturing company. I can tell every man or woman that have they’re independent opinion, own mindset and respect for all human beings that Thomas Sanladerer have been so much better and professional in his hundreds of upcoming posts of his experience within the world of 3d printing, that i was a bit harsh on him now, and fully understand his nature of bringing (t-)his message across this time, (he knows just about every other thing about this difficult 3d print topic for real) I forgive him for being preoccupied with the fact that he has forgotten about his position as in being neutral about the brands he mentioned instead of the brand he prefers. Shows every sign of human life in him (I seem to be very human look-a-like as well didn’t i?)
If he had the money figure just right i would have never replied that harsh on him. Please let the E3D people also live and breath a little bit. They have revolutionized step 1 upgrading your hotend with a big amount on the V5 didn’t they? V6 was indeed ages ago and was more or less fine tuning the previous versions.
Thomas didn’t make this video (sloppy seconds) so it be, as well as the prices variety of items purchased from each manufacturer and dealerships in the continent difference will fluctuate more than what i was aware of. And yes, the mosquito and dragon hotend performance is not slim compared with the V6 as i suggested (therefore i haven’t been so aware of punctuation, I rarely regret my decisions…so i’m still not sorry because I made a good point with some blurred lines and swapped out 2 different persons completely.
@@raymonschepers994 I don't know what you're trying to get at, exactly. It sorta comes off like you're an employee of E3D, or at least a good friend of one? Or maybe just drunk and celebrating New Year's Eve in the TH-cam comment section? I really don't know... Anyhow.
The V6 is open source, so the clones are fair game. E3D's new Revo system is not open source, however, though it looks quite innovative and cool. If money were no object, I'd probably be upgrading to those ASAP.
Despite my comment on Nero's video that you're ranting under, I changed my stock hotends to TriangleLab V6 with plated copper nozzles. I discovered I actually like the entire V6 ecosystem, due to the open source nature of it. Though I am gonna throw Bondtech CHT nozzles in my printers to boost max flow.
Anyhow. Use whatever hotend you want, that's my motto. If you have a beef with Nero or Thomas? or whoever, I really don't care. I still think Nero's video was useful, and clear.
Great job on explaining the differences. Thank you, I've made my decision!
Thanks! An excellent review. I share your experience. The setup of the Mosquito and the "clones" as well is very good. Easier nozzle change and excellent heatbreak behaveour.
Really good points, very clear explanation. and you didn't pick a favorite from the start of the video. Very nice video, thank you!
An excellent and detailed video that is still helpful years later. Thanks!
Thank you for such great videos!
great comprehensive video, thanks man!
One good reason I might suggest the slice engineering stuff. They respond quickly to inquiries and actually actively help you solve issues. But that was a good comparison for the hot ends.
Slice really put their product out to offer a High end solution for the community, and deserve patent for their hard work. I'd buy, having money helps though
It continually fascinates me that six or seven years later manufacturers have finally caught on to the idea that Anders Olsson had a point with his quick change redesign of the Ultimaker 2 block. Though I'm glad they are because I don't want to live without it after replacing my Ultimakers.
V6 nozzles became a standard before his "idea"
I took my stock Ender 3 Pro hotend, replaced the heat break with an all metal titanium version heat break from Spool3D and I replaced the heat block with a nickel plated copper heat block with titanium mounting screws from Spool3D. I have a 32bit motherboard with Marlin 2.0 so I can run PID auto tunes from the LCD menu. It prints CF nylon at 270-280 C perfectly. PLA, PETG, ABS, and PC also works great. Both parts cost less than a Micro Swiss and works much better. My printer maxes out at 315 C because that is the limit of the stock thermistor. Also using Overture hardened steel nozzles.
And I use a textured glass bed on solid bed mounts with a BLtouch auto bed leveling probe, and have Z axis gantry support brackets for more rigidity.
Triangle V6 removed form Ali Cart. Dragon added to Ali cart. Good job the sale hasn't started yet ;)
You won't regret it, it's an excellent design. Props to slice for their engineering prowess, and triangle labs continues cloning anything and everything fairly well. Also you might consider looking at either the superfly, sherpa mini, or mjolnir printable extruders, they pair very well w/both the mosquito&dragon.
There is one little plus with the Trianglelabs variant vs the Phateus variant. Their use of a V6 "style" heater block does enable better contact with higher wattage heater cartridges. The Phaetus block is 16mm wide, V6 is 20mm. Finding 16mm heater cartridges above 40-50 watt is unicorn teeth. And having a 60-70 watt, 500°C+ capable heater cartridge sticking out near half a centimeter from the block is not a great solution.
@@pr0xZen Yea and considering how hot the heater cartridge gets that bit of protrusion is a fire hazard for sure.
i want one of your nozzle torque wrenches :o i've 3d printed a lot of them but never got accurate numbers
Two changes I'd do to the v6-style heater block is move the heater hole 0.5-1mm away from the bottom (may require an extra clamping screw to offset the added stiffness) for better heat transfer all around and give 1mm more meat behind the thermistor so it isn't so close to having one side exposed to ambient temperature. As for thermistor placement, I think behind the nozzle to monitor filament temperature instead of heater temperature makes the most sense since heater temperature does not account for how much heat melting filament is taking away nor the lag of heat moving between the heater and melt zone. With a thermistor tracking filament temperature, it should be possible to add and calibrate a PID control to regulate temperature against filament feed rate and smooth out nozzle temperature.
you probably saved me a lot of money! i was lucky to buy my ender 3 v2 for 189€ . it’s my first printer. comparing what i do and what i get it makes the most sense to go for the dragon. especially if i have to pay 35€ taxes on the mosquito… even though i would love to own one, i can’t get over the fact that it would cost me more than the printer it self . i love their design and their engineering approach!… thanks a lot! a lot of love from germany
The video i was looking for. Thank you!
Good information, soothing voice, crisp in-focus video and to top it all off a sexy wrench 👍
Interesting review
Thanks for sharing👍😀
Thank you. This helped me learn a lot.
Thanks for all the info. I was looking at getting a v6 mainly just because it’s the one I hear about most commonly, but there were a lot of factors I never knew about, especially when it comes to nozzle changes and there’s no way I’d go v6 now.
for someone who is building a printer from scratch (voron trident) and already understanding multiple concepts , narrowing down on the nozzle has been a task of its own. this video has clarified so many things for me. thank you so much.
I think a lot of E3D's non-development is in thinking issues are related to the other parts of a 3d printer (ie motion system, slicer settings, etc ).
But you outlined very well why those other hotends are better.
I'm upgrading my printer's extruder, but after watching your video, I'm also upgrading the hotend (Dragon got me) and designing new mounting.
so helpful buddy!! I wish the Tronxy people would get U 2 test their new DD hotends!! even though you R a custom 3dp man!! U R so helpful with these little sit-down's thanks 4 taking the time!!
It is interesting to see the comparisons. I had looked into all of these quite a bit. It was interesting to earn that the originator of the Dragon design was Phaetus.
Currently I've been running a clone of the Mosquito (Mellow / NF-Crazy) and found it to be a nice balance of features/cost for my needs.
Can I ask how has the mosquito clone from mellow been after 6 months? I just ordered the ordinary version with the copper block from the same store and am curious if it holds up.
@@ZeppFloyd85 no complaints - but haven't been doing much printing
Excellent video
Thanks! Went with the TL Dragon for my to-be v0, now its a waiting game..
Nice analysis! Now I can actually make an informed change from the V6.
i like the stock creality hotend design (except the fact that the ptfe goes all the way to the nozzle). in that design the heatbreak isnt structural either theres 2 standoffs. ive always removed the nozzle by just unscrewing it with the wrench without holding the heat block or anything and so far no problems. also had a homing mistake where the nozzle powered through the bed clip when for some reason it homed z and y before it did x (the low profile bed clips the v2 uses are really solid and attatched hard) and that didnt damage the hotend either.
Thank you for the video
Very nice explanation!
having the thermistor where it'll get a temperature reading nearer the filament, and away from the heater will give you a more stable temperature _at the nozzle_.
Having the thermistor near the heater will give you a faster response on your temperature graphs, but the real nozzle temp will lag behind the readings of the thermistor.
Another more recent example of this is in the Revo, where the thermistor is integrated near the heater. CNCkitchen's measurements of the temperature (with a thermistor in the nozzle) showed a significant delay between when it said it was up to temperature, and when the nozzle temp caught up to the heater temp.
He didn't see it as a dealbreaker, but it is definitely worse, and could cause problems in situations where you've got a lot of thermal load, or rapidly changing flow.
In higher flow situations, like large nozzles at high speeds, there'll be more temperature gradient, so it'll need the temperature set higher to compensate. The problem is that if you bump it up 10 degrees to compensate, it'll be running extra hot when the loads are light.
For example, if your print slows down to do the smokestack on a benchy, the nozzle will get much hotter than it is when it's printing at a higher flow rate earlier in the print.
I need that tool you’re using to remove the nozzle. It makes a delightful sound
Im using the Dragon hotend. I Love it.
I got Mr Carlson's Lab vibes. Great video
Lol, very much so
I liked this guy’s vibe so much I went and subscribed to Mr Carlson’s Lab 😅
I think I've watched this video three times now... This is seriously some good stuff.
Agree 100%, it's time for groove mount and the V6 double-handed nozzle change to go away and the 3D printing community to move forward.
I have a few hundred hours on my Dragon and had no issues at all. Personally I love it.
Same here w/ trilabs version (slightly different heater block shape, functionally identical however). I couldn't justify spending $150+ on the mosquito to go on a $300 printer; I understand it's impressive engineering, but I'm on a limited fixed income and much as I hate supporting cloners thats what I've had to do. If slice priced it at or just above $100, i would've bought a mosquito instead, but they've got bondtech-esque prices...
I wish the Dragonfly was included in this roundup. It is seriously such a nice hotend.
Dragonfly wasnt around when this video was made. But yes it is a good hotend.
Where I can get the nozzle torque wrenches ?)
Do you think you could do one of these sorts of videos for direct drive extruder / hotends? I was looking at stuff like the E3D Hemera, BIQU H2, TriangleLabs Matrix and Bondtech LGX FF but I don't know which to get. I was going to use it on a Hypercube Evolution 400x400x400 and constantly swap between 0.4 and 1.2mm nozzles. (I print a lot of simple, structural parts for projects but occasionally need the accuracy of a 0.4)
I found the trick with the V6 is to use a really good PC CPU heat sink compound for the heat break to heat sink. Got rid of all my heat creep issues in an enclosed and heated chamber. Outside of that it's still an old hotend that's kind of run it's course.
Great info! Thank you for this. On a side: Is the nozzle wrench your using printable? or was that a purchase?
Its a printable design. Just search torque wrench on thingiverse
Nero 3dp Hi, what torque do you use yours?
I would really like to get your input on how and what mount to use to install the dragon. The only mounts that I could find are for the grove mounts.
If you're installing on a Voron 2.4, it has a mount for the Dragon - github.com/VoronDesign/Voron-2/tree/Voron2.4/STLs/VORON2.4/Gantry/X_Axis/X%20Carriage/Printheads/TriangleLab%20Dragon
I see you also looked the phaetus dragon hotend as well. I am guessing the Triangle Labs benefits from a stock sock, which means it is will be easier source? I have a TL V6 Volcano hotend and dual drive that I have been looking at installing for a year. Might get the Dragon.
What's the best way to go about unclogging a dragon heat break/heat sink? I did a board swap and unknowingly had no power to the hotend fan for a lengthy print w/ carbon fiber pla. I took the nozzle off, and it looks like the filament strand (maybe 1" long) melted in place all the way from the bottom to the entrance. Moral of the story, hotend fans are important.
Should I just pop the heat block off, grab a torch and needle and go to work, or is there a more elegant method?
I mainly want to print helmets and figures (6inch and bigger). Not interested in flexible..for now but even than it would be very minor projects. Would you recommend the hemera + v6 or bmg + mosquito?
Your fingertips are CLEAN.
watt/ (meter centigrade)
silver 420, copper 380, gold 295, aluminum 220, brass 210, zinc 120, boron nitride solid 182 powder ~ 1/3, stainless steel 27, lead 34, Titanium 20, ceramic 15, and plastics 0.5 The fin efficiency of the block is ~100% which means the temperature of the block is uniform and the response time very very short. The ceramic and steel construction of the heat cartridges and thermistor means there response time is much poorer. So the location of the thermistor makes no difference but the quality of the heat transfer of the heater and thermistor make a lot of difference. The thermal ceramic filled goop is a very poor conductor but better then air. Electrical isolation is not needed so my choice would be a soft metal filler powder purchased or made with the finest file you have; lead, indium, gold in a grease to keep the mess down.
@9:42 its not the heatsink that stops the creep. Its the heatbrake, completely. I'm using a completely stock CR10s hotend but with the change to a bimetal heatbrake. I can hold the heatsink in my hand while printing. there is no need to waste $150 on a hotend if you are trying to fight heatcreep.
Huh I use a titanium heatbreak on my V6 but even before that i never had heatcreep issue sin my enclosure. I use a noctua 40x20mm fan. the other toolhead has a 30x10mm fan i think? i forgot honestly. never had issues. tho my enclosure is more around 40c etc. I never properly measured it with the blanket over it just when it's printing inside my closet. I sometimes throw a blanket over it as the enclosure! luckily my ABS panels are coming soon so I can just enclose the actual printer
Another question what hotend are you using. I'm contemplating upgrading my hot end to from an original e3dV6 I got ages ago and it's served me well but it's passed its day. I'm very tempted to get a high flow triangle labs dragon however I only print on a 0.5 nozzle (occasionally 0.4 or 0.6) do you think I would benefit from getting a high flow variant on an Ender 3 pro switch wire, with the intention of super fast high quality prints or is that a fantasy and I won't ever get to push the standard flow on a 0.5 nozzle on a switch wire so just go standard flow for easier print settings (less ozzing etc)?
ZERO issues on Dragon since 6-7 months. Changing thermistor or heater on Mosquito? Thank you but no... (plus the cost of sourcing paste)
Using Dragon too, no issues. Printing Pla, Petg, Tpu...
@@Snooooozel I can not print PLA, it's always clogging after a few mm. I can pull out the filament, cut the last part and put it in manually with no problems. It seems that the filament in the heatsink is enlargening.
@@kaptn_kapton to high retract length maybe?
@@Snooooozel I found the problem. I was printing to slow (15mm/s) in the first layer, because i had adheasion problems in the past. Now it seems to work.
You should make a new video with all the new heatbreak optiond and new hotends from china! Bi metalic and even ceramic heatbreaks
Thanks for the video. You did spend a lot of time trashing V6, most people buy it for cost reasons.
Its not a "bad" hotend per se. For its price. A good tl sourced one cant be beat. Its just when compared to others its a relatively old design and feature lacking
Have you ever hit the limit flow rate of normal Mosquito hotend in real use? If so what at what speed and nozzle size?(I usually print PETG ABS PC)
I plan on using 0.6mm on mine with about 0.2-0.3mm layer height with as much speed as the machine can while still print good quality parts.
My guess is the normal one is good enough but I want to be sure before ordering the hotend.
It should be noted that standard flow Dragon/Mosquito have higher maximum flow than the standard V6, because of copper and less heat being stolen through the heatbreak.
Yeah the Hi-Flow / Magnums have the let's say the volcano block sort of integrated .
@@Underp4ntz_Gaming_Channel i'm not even talking about those yet, even standard flow will be able to go a bit faster. It's not enough to use 0.8 nozzle or anything crazy like that, but it's something.
Nero's video: "choosing a hotend"
Me, who has been on the discord server for more than a day: "Dragon."
great vid, thanks! this will help a lot in my soon-to-be v2.4. btw, 27:40 the was absolutely nothing "abject" about any part of your vid, it was perfect ; P
Thermal paste seems like a good idea in general. Could we use the boron paste in the other designs?
Yea u can use the paste with any hotend
I laughed probably to hard XD "first thing todo when you get your Dragon is, take the screws out and.. Throw this away!" XD love it..
Late to the party but what about a Triangle Labs Spider (Mosquito clone)? It's a few $'s cheaper than the Dragon and I already have the boron paste. I'm trying to decide. It's going into a Troodon (Voron clone). Thanks
Hey there. I have a question. Well a few actually. 1st what are yout thoughts on the Phaetus Dragonfly HIC HF vs the Phaetus Rapido, with the ceramic heatchamber, and how would you rate those against the Mosquito, or the Dragon? I am pretty new to 3d Printing, so any insight that helps me decide wich one(s) I want on my Ender 5 plus would be very appreciated!
And 2nd: The Hotend I already ordered for starters is the above mentioned Phaetus Dragonfly HIC HF, and I have seen the pics of it show a Bowden tube catcher on the top of the heatsink. Does that mean a) there is a Bowden Tube going down `till kingdom come inside there, like on the stock hotend for the ender 5 plus? and/or b) that I HAVE to use this one with a Bowden extractor system, or can I use it also as direct drive, or what? Also, when they say the amazing silicone sock can take 350C, does that mean the hotend gets weak knees at that temperature too, or could one be really bold and just remove the rubber, and go rawdoggin` some radioactive spider PEEK or whatever with let`s just say 400C.
Bonus question: How much of an advantage would a UHF Rapido hotend even be, when everybody preaches to slow down your printspeed if you want nicer prints, and also, I live in a small appartment with neightbors on every side and direction, thin walls too, so I need the thing to be at least not as loud as it is now. Now meaning all is still original so far, but the magnetic flexbed and the 0.6 and 0.8 Nozzles I got right away with the printer. Much more is on the way, like the Phaetus hotend, noctua fans (as a proud austrian, I just had to...) a mobo, a display (goddamn touchscreen needs to go, and yesterday!) but so far none of that is here wich would not matter anywho, b`cuz the mofo of a mobo with it`s 8bit is not doing a thing, besides making me mad!
I use cheap V6's all day. Rarely have issues when its set up well with a fat fan.
Any pointers on how to mount the Dragon hotend WITHOUT the adapter (as you suggest) ? Either direct or Bowden? Thanks
Id recommend looking at how its mounted on either the Voron Vzero or afterburner toolhead for example. Its simply screwed to the mount.
The conductivity of the aluminum block is good that the fin efficiency is 100% so the location of the heater or temperature measuring probe doesn't matter. The copper is bonded metallic to the SS tube so the SS tube is thin where it is bonded.. Thus better heat transfer, cooling. The conductivity of the past is poor compared to aluminum or copper and even stainless steel so the heater will run hotter for the same heat input given, shorter life. Compression bond of the clamp causes more contact of metal to metal of the heater that is built for pressure. I take the thin SS heat break because the sooner the plastic sees a cool surface the sooner it starts to cool. The titanium prevents heat conduction but also prevents the plastic from seeing a cool surface. Since it screws into the heat sink that distance is lost. Titanium ring that was clamped against the heat block and heat sink would provide the shortest construction.
Informative!
@02:17 Heh... Ordered a Voron 2.4 Kit from FormBot a few days ago and asked them to remove the stock E3D V6 Knockoff ( and the associated price ) that ships with the kit since I was planning on going with the Mosquito Magnum route and the amount I saved were 6.- 😐
Yes , its correct i have "rotaiting e3d " i put some kapton tape, its stop, but using bolts its better
but if you give up on groove mounts you can you connect it to a direct drive extruder? as most seem to be groove compatible?
So the dragon hot end has been pulled and is no longer for sale. Thanks slice engineering. They’ve exercised their patent in an opensource world.
Dragon hotend are now sold in separate parts instead of assembled on Aliexpress and Banggood. Phaetus, the maker of Dragon hotend is also an approved seller on Voron discord channel.
@@Paul-sk2pc Thanks Paul. Does selling it in parts get around the patent?
@@bonjipoo Chinese manufacturers don’t care about Intl patents as foreign companies can’t win in Chinese court. It’s like trying to sue Putin in Russia.
The reason Dragon or copies were removed from AliExpress is because Ali is traded on NYSE and proportionally owned by US investors. This is also why you have to pay US sales tax when you buy on Aliexpress.
Simply put, Chinese will continually clone and sell whatever is profitable. SE maybe able to limit the amount of platform they can sell on. But they can’t stop put an end to clone or copies.
@@Paul-sk2pc This is a great and detail answer. Makes sense. Many thanks.
Groove mounts need to be machined from aluminium. Never had a issue with them. Still super light and helping to cool.
This perfectly explains why I hate the groove mount. Plus it makes designs bully. Wish they'd change that already
Can i use any of these with the Volcano set up? I like the longer heat section when printing with larger nozzles.
There is a modded variant thats volcano compatible. As is though it does support most dragon and mosquito high flow variants
@@CanuckCreator thank you . I currently have a titan with volcano. Looking to go BMG with new set up but enjoy the volcano block. Thanks for the help
the groove mount is not that bad if the holding part is also out of metal.
Thank you for this… can you use an E3D x nozzle with the Mosquito? The E3D is 12.5mm overall length, but with a 6mm thread length…. The Slice nozzles are 12.5mm overall, but with a 7mm thread length…
Ive used both in both. Just need to adjust z offset
You linked the torque wrench you used, but there are models ranging from 0.5 to 6 N/m.
Could you please specify the torque version you use for your nozzles?
in case of nozzle tightening it's dangerous to go above 2.5Nm, 1.8 to 2Nm being a good choice.
Hello,
What 3d printers would you recommend to print PET-G consistently good and reliable results
Volume needed would be (some times) 300x300 XY for the base. Height like 100mm, so nothing crazy there for very high builds
Assuming to use the dragon hotend.
Some printers that don't break the bank, so probably in the 400usd range maybe allowing up to 500$
Thank you
Get a ender 5 plus
I should start making these I could make that middle one on a lathe in about an hour maybe the last
Good luck
With the thermal conductivity or copper, heated through an at-most-an-inch long, fairly beefy continous block - it's fairly unlikely you'll ever see any relevant difference from the locations of the thermistors vs the cartridges. Unless you're pumping gallium through the nozzle at 30mm^3/s instead of plastics.
you mentioned we can print at 300 mm/S whith what nozlle ??
Great explanation, which one has the least mass?
7:05 Can you please explain why a larger melt zone is better? I can see it being a problem - the melted filament residue can affect more of the flow path (leading to more hassle with cleaning, epecially in these fancy hotends... or even complex, expensive parts to replace).
On the other hand the advantage can be speed (more contact area between filament and melt zone means filament can move a lot faster). So isn't it at least a tradeoff, not a clear advantage?
Care to elaborate on it?
The larger your meltzone is the faster you can print. Putting a bigger nozzle on only gets you so far if your melt Zone isn't big enough for the speed you're trying to print it just clogs and clicks at the extruder you can turn your heat up higher to combat this but the proper way to fix it is get a larger melt zone,that's where a volcano comes in
FWIW i know the dragon is the one you recommend, but you can get mosquito clones from BTT for £30 now, Dragons are still about £55.
Unfortunatly i havent had any hands on experience with the mosquito clones and from what ive seen
.some have been great..some have been a complete miss. So for that i wouldn't recommend one over a dragon. At least at this point in time.
@@CanuckCreator i mean there are a number of reasons i'd personally pick the dragon, i just wanted to let people know.
Yeah plus they got a clam mount which i really like, instead of the thermal paste hassle and spending way more time replacing parts or even damaging the thermister or cartridge... The clones seem to work great... but the Dragons are more convenient for older printers. just trash your V6 and smack in the Dragon without doing any modifications. And I think they know that and keep the price up BUT they recently got a Dragon V2 [only an upgraded heatsink] which is just the same price as the V1, but so far i know they just replaced v1 with v2 plus you still can buy the older heatsinks.
I think the reason the Dragon is expensive is because of the same reason original E3D equipment is expensive: equipment to machine or cast the parts and quality control cost money. Kinda why I would go with the Dragon still.
Not to take away credit from TwoTrees - they got some good stuff going on, pricewise they're mostly right below TL.
I have top triangle lab v6 now, and so impressed by quality so I can slap 20 more $ on top to get dragon and not a mosquito clone.
13:00 You could say the V6 is screwed. 😉
I'll stick with the V6 Volcano all metal variant, thanks.
but can be reused the termistor and heater? that BN look hard to remove.
i have a Trianglelab Dragon hotend mounted in an Afterburner and i cannot get it to not string in Cura (tried z-hop, comb, coast, retract from 0.4 to 1.5 with retract speed from 25 to 80 mm/s). Calibrated esteps/flow/temp (PLA @195) and still it produces fine wisps. The only way i can use it is in S3D with 2mm Wipe enabled (0.6 retract @35 mm/s). This way in S3D it works great ...
If anyone has any idea how to get it working in Cura i would highly appreciate it.
Thats a nice and easy nozzle changing tool. Where can i get one?
Whats the weight difference between V6 & Dragon since the dragon doesn't need groove or thread mount?
5g. Not enough to make any difference imo
May you share one of your printer profile? What slicer are you running?
Im running cura, its a run the default voron v2 profile but tweaked and tuned a bit.
What about the Spider Hotend from Triangle labs? Looks like Dragon heatblock could be exchanged with the Spider heatblock.
the spider is more a clone of the slice mosquito and has the same mount setup and requirement for thermal paste for the heater cartridge/thermistor
Can I have the cable chain link you're using for your Voron? It looks really sturdy. Thanks!
RIP Dragon.
Yeah they are getting harder to find. A real shame.
Am I assuming correctly, that the 15 Euros for a bimetal heatbreak for my Genius should rather go into a Dragon hotend which would give me the same amount of flow? How often do these Volcanos break?
I just went from a Volcano to a Dragon and, while Volcanos don't really break, I got tired of it being so finicky. The Dragon worked better right off the bat where a Volcano would keep clogging itself. And, no, it's not tuning at fault here. If you can drive a unicycle on a million volt power line does not mean it's a feasible or useful thing to do in general. I'm done with these old V6 types...
@@MDealer Thanks, already ordered my heatbreak. Will stick to the Volcano for a while. Asked around about some dual extrusion hotend based on mosquito, but I would've needed another extruder for it, since I've got a direct drive Titan clone. Maybe later. Thanks for the advice anyways.
Currently running a V6 volcano on my Ender 3 but planning on going to a TL Dragon in the near future because of the easier nozzle changes. The price for the Dragon as of 7/2020 is US$78 for the high flow version. I also have a 24V/70W (vs 24V/40W stock) heater cartridge to speed up nozzle warm-up.
As far as the groove mount goes, I've found that adding a grub screw to the plastic mount to allow locking the hotend in place works great.
What is the info or link to the cartridges you're using? I just got a Dragon and I am a Super Noob at 3d printing.... need help!
So you print at 12mm^3/s with a 0.4mm nozzle regularly? I can only push about 4mm^3/s with my stock Ultimaker 2 hot end. I'll be installing a V6 (2.85mm) on it soon to see if it improves
Could somebody please provide a link for the quick disconnect connectors used in the video please?
Too many choices trying to find the correct type online.
Molex microfit 3`s
@@CanuckCreator Thank you for the reply and great videos!
is there any drawback to using high flow variant but keeping the nozzle at 0.4? i kinda want to future proof by getting high flow variant but don't feel like using 0.6 at the moment but would like to in the future.
Can be a tad more work involved and tuning, and the potential for more stringing/higher PA required
I am finally getting around to installing my dragon hotend. Do I need to disassemble and reassemble it at all prior to install or can I just install it and heat tighten the nozzle?
Just install it as is and make sure the nozzle is tight