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Dec 2015

Maybe going to 240 or even 250°C wil make things better. Depending on your hotend, the actual temperature inside the melt zone can vary a bit from what it says on the display.

ok, will try it, but I am afraid, that the surface quality will be worse then.

Marius, as usual, every time I read your comments, I feel like I strike gold! Thanks so much for sharing this.

So what do you think would be the best uses for nGen?

Marius-

Thank you very much for the detailed review/analysis of both materials. While I’m still not 100% certain which way I’ll go, I certainly know much more about what to expect with each. Most likely, I’ll pick up some of each and play with them both to see what works best on my Lulzbot Taz.

Thanks for being awesome.

-Brandon

test print at 247°C finished and… broke pretty easy - no difference to the print at 235°C.

I also printed the same parts in PLA and they were much stronger on both printers.

Even the Colorfabb team had no more ideas on how to improve the strength.

So for me it is clear that ngen is not the first choice for parts that are stressed like bottle openers, etc.

It would be interesting if somebody can approve or disprove my results.