Is changing to a smaller nozzle, say .4 to .2 as straight forward as it would seem? Remove the nozzle and replace with the new one then change relevant settings?
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Sep '16last reply
Sep '16- 19
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Is changing to a smaller nozzle, say .4 to .2 as straight forward as it would seem? Remove the nozzle and replace with the new one then change relevant settings?
Hey,
It’s more or less that simple yes, just make sure you follow the printer manufactures guide on doing it, i.e. Heat up the nozzle.
James.
It depents on the type of printer.
If you have an olsson block for example. yes.
Most cases it isn’t that straight forward
Yes it is that simple but keep in mind that your printing hours will change considering that a smaller nozzle has to travel more times to make a 1mm wall thicknes for example.also check if the nozzle height has not changed.
Yes, but with a hot nozzle if full of filament. However, 0.2 create a lot of back pressure on the nozzle. And also slows printing seen way down. So your feed rate has to go slower. And then you may need to increase the current to the stepper motor on the extruder depending on your setup. So yes can swap a nozzle easy, but slicer settings will change dramatically.
And nozzle diameter determines the thickest layer you should make with that size nozzle
Usually it is. I have changed out my Di3 0.4 nozzle to a 0.3. Just be careful of any thermistors and tiny wires if you have those. I think about 80% of the people I see on the Di3 that try and unclog / remove their nozzle end up breaking their thermistor. Also, you will / should heat up the extruder some when you do the final tightening of the nozzle. Most of the times you screw the nozzle all the way in, back it out half a turn, then screw in the cold end tube as far as it will go, then heat the extrude and finish tightening the nozzle. This assures a good seal between the two (but vendor specific so check your printers instructions). I found switching to a 0.2 caused too many problems (skipping) from the amount of filament trying to squeeze down to that size and caused back pressure and skipping.
It’s harder to get the first layer right and also cannot print fast because of thinner filament extrusion. For your infills, they may not look as great as .4 depending on the quality of the filament, you actually have weaker objects with same settings so you need to increase the infill. And of course .2 clogs more frequent than .4 . In my experience 1.75mm filament works much better than 3mm for smaller nozzles like .2 in terms of both print quality and maintenance.
Yes, you are right.
Take care to change nozzle heating it to a temperature that can melt your material and verify bed leveling of course… Then, in your slicer, set new nozzle diameter, suitable temperature, speed and so on.
Based on my experience, the nozzle diameter force to reduce the height of the layer (usually half of the nozzle diameter. If you keep for example the layer height to 0.18 with nozzle diameter of 0.2mm, there will appear some cut on the wall surface, due to the fact that the touching conditions of the “tube” is minimal. At least this was happens to me with ABS. Therefore I came back to 0.4/0.6mm if I don’t have specific need of high accuracy. Hope this experience could help you.