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Apr 2017

That is not correct advice to “loosen” or “tighten” a nozzle to correct height. You must move the complete hot end up or down to change height. The hot end is under extreme heat and pressure and any leakage will blow the plastic past the threads or out the top of the hot block.

Hey everyone, thank you so much for your answers! Really appreciate that!

Another issue that I observed recently:

4. Is not giving me very correct measurements, and in case if I print a tube it comes oval. 1 mm off.

Yes, you can shim up the not end with a piece of foil, but that moves the whole assembly and does not cure the real problem. We did that on a Flash Forge - Creator Pro, and it worked but also caused other problems. So, you “not correct advice. . .” is also not exact. You could have been a bit more diplomatic about your suggestion. Your statement is a bit harsh and rude.

You know

I’m having a problem where my bed is not heat up at all it says is it 115° but it’s like Stonecoal can someone please help me

4. If u tryto make a circular thing, but you get an oval means that x or y are not exactly at 90 degrees. My machine does the same: I make 2 squares one inside the other, but moving one square it doesnt fit inside the other. Thats because They are not square.

Yes, but one of the extruders was loose. I don’t think it is suppose to be loose. When it was tightened the hot-ends were almost even.

Yeah but I am wondering if its because of the belts not being tight enough or too tight?, and how is it possible that the xy are not square? if the machine has the exact place to put them in?

You are the one being rude. His advice is correct. To change the height of the nozzle in relation to the other nozzle you have to loosen the barrel where it attaches to the cooling bar and slide the entire hot end assembly up or down. Loosening or tightening the nozzle itself is absolutely the wrong thing to do and will only lead to problems with extrusion.