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12 / 21
Aug 2015

I own both a makergear, and have printed my fair share of Ninjaflex. I have the single 3b nozzle, and doing supports is not easy at all. The only way to supplement this is just getting the dual nozzle. Dual nozzles make life easier, much easier.

I have printed several things with Ninjaflex, and I agree with CreativeDex in that it requires some patience and trial and error. My extruder is setup for 1.75mm Filament, but if you were to install the optional 3.00mm filament drive it might eliminate most of the problems.

The 1.75mm Ninjaflex is soft and thin causing it to bunch up in the standard M2 filament drive. I haven’t tried the 3.00mm filament drive/Ninjaflex filament, but if I was printing with flexible filaments more often I would.

The MakerGear M2 is an excellent printer. I have one but I never printed with that material, only PLA. The MakerGear M2 has been my only printer until this week when I got a Fusion3 F306. I will be selling my MakerGear M2 now as In switch over everything to the F306. If you are in the Chicago area and are interested in an M2 let me know. info@markheller3d.com

I have not printed with Ninjaflex but I have printed with TPU flexible filament which works very well with the Makergear M2. I have printed iPhone case which turned out great. I believe Ninjaflex is a little more softer than TPU. Hope this helps .

I tried a flexible filament in my Makergear M2 with some success. It was not ninjaflex though. I had to run it at 25 mm/s and I had to feed it directly from the spool (didn’t use the tube) to prevent constant jams. Even so it jammed enough that a large print would have been impossible. It often peeled off the bed during printing. I can’t remember the brand I used and I don’t know if it is better or worse than ninjaflex.

Thanks for all the great feedback. It is really appreciated.

It prints… but its a ton of trial and error… 220 to 255 degrees is the range depending on your situation, thus you probably should get the v4 extruder on it. The v4 bunches up less but if you just get a v3b I had to redesign the extruder to get it to work. Ninja flex is a novelty filament in my opinion… ton of effort to get ok looking parts at a slower then tar pace. Thin walls DONT support themselves.

12 days later
2 months later
3 months later

I’ve had good results with the Semiflex version of Ninjaflex. I did have it wrap around my extruder gear, but that was my fault trying to push it at 190 degrees instead of 215 degrees.