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Oct 2015

I whole heartedly agree.

There are indeed differing levels of 3D printers on the market. when I bought my CTC, I could have had a cheaper option like a Prusa I3 which required much much more assembly, set up and calibration.

OR I could have gone for the much higher end of the spectrum and got a stratasys or something like that (enter very expensive brand name here)

I’d never used a 3D printer before let alone knew anything about them, operations or materials. I opted for the CTC because it was already assembled taking out a lot of the work.

Straight away though I had issues, exactly as you’ve mentioned. The nozzles would clog, the prints wouldn’t stick, I couldn’t get replacement Kapton for the bed cheap, the extruders would skip on the filament.

Over all, it was a terrible machine which I couldn’t trust to run more than an hour without messing up.

It was from that I persevered with it, I replaced the stock fixed extruders with spring loaded ones which has solved the skipping on the filament. I replaced the PTFE tube with that which is 1mm longer so that it’s compressed in the thermal barrier tube, no more clogging or jamming.

I’ve since made a TON of other modifications and the print quality is fantastic but is still only as good as the settings I use.

My point being, no matter what level of user you are, no matter what level of machine you have, it’s still developing and there’s still a lot to learn.

I’ve recently built a Rostock legacy and had masses of issues with it, so much so I started to design MY OWN printer to repurpose the parts I bought for the Rostock. But I persevered with it and now it’s at a point where I’m happy with it. Just further reiterates my point above.

… or maybe you’re just the kind of user who just wants a turnkey solution, something along the lines of a Nexpresso coffee machine.

If that’s the case, then perhaps it would be good to understand that 3D printing isn’t quite there yet, at that level.

While I disagree with your comments, I’ll back mine having owned one for a bit more than 6 months:

  • 3D printing on FDM for the average consumer still has its quirks, regardless of how expensive the printer is
    • clogging
    • calibrating
    • consumable parts replacement (overall maintenance)

… and whatever else I’m not thinking of right now

  • Buying a cheap 3D printer has enabled me to experiment with the technology and keep learning more about than I would otherwise
  • The printer is not without its limitations, but the prints are very, very acceptable in terms of detail and quality
  • It’s even accessible to hardware/software mods

You’ve made 6 comments, and they’re all about how bad your CTC dual extruder is. You understand that it’s an exact copy of the MakerBot Replicator 1 dual, right? Just like the FlashForge and a half dozen other inexpensive Chinese-made printers.

Jams happen, that’s just how it goes with FDM printers. Doesn’t matter if it’s CTC or MakerBot. But I’ve had my printer for eight months now, and it’s only jammed once. If you wanted a maintenance-free printing experience, you should’ve spent a couple tens of thousands of bucks more.

As for all the problems you’re having with your CTC, have you tried checking to see if the #P38K4C register is set to 1?

I think so too.

My CTC has MK7 extruders (which are common) and after over 500 printing hours I didn’t had any problems. I had to exchange the PTFE tube only once (I bought 1m for 3€, so I can change it as often as I want) and two times the nozzle was jammed/blocked, but this happend when I change my Filament from ABS to PLA or TPU or vice versa. CTC is a pretty good printer! An you get it these days for < 400€ with dual extruder

I am so surprised at how many replies this topic has gained. This topic was made in order to fix this part which i have now done with plenty of ptfe tubing I can use for the future.