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Mar 2016

No, your not doing it right! Take one hand and put your middle and index fingers on the spring screws, while with your thumb pulling back on the arm. Then you are releasing the pressure allowing you to use your other hand to pull the filament slowly up and out, so as to not pull molten plastic out with it!

Gah, seriously!? I asked both techs I talked to what the proper procedure was, and specifically asked if I should be pushing the latch back like I do when loading, and they both said “no, just heat the extruder and gently pull up on the filament”.

Sigh.

Lol! There is the alt method of reversing your extruder stepper motor, but this would be more awkward and possibly pull molten plastic up with it!

Okay, well… I will try changing filament again when this next print finishes. Thanks for the tips!

It’s the weirdest thing. I push that tab back, and yeah the filament pulls out nice and easy UNTIL I’ve pulled about a 3" length or so out and then it just stops and refuses to go any farther.

Any thoughts appreciated!

3" sounds like the transition point between the hotend and the housing. Check alignment between the two. A good way to check is by removing the hotend. If its significantly galled by the threads then it wasn’t installed properly.

It’s on the high end, like nylon and ABS… If you have a grooved insulator tube, your chances are better. If you go from bed heat to head heat to print (not the other way around), your chances also go up… Otherwise heat will travel up the filament and melt the ptfe tube.

Nevermind… looks like they made an upgrade! Now to print one for my KS Robo3D…