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Feb 2016

I’ve been printing for a while now originally had a prusa i3 aluminium kit which has since now been retired for a ps3steel with much better components (trapezoidal lead screws, bulldog xl extruder, smoothieboard controller etc) I’ve always used 3mm filament because that’s what I started with … However my buldog xl is huge and heavy (I did try a Bowden setup but I really dislike it) now I was thinking of dropping down to 1.75mm filament this will allow me to fit 2 direct drive all metal extruders in the same space occupied by the bulldog xl this should allow me to extruder faster and therefore up my printing speed. Is this a sound idea or do I stick with my 3mm filament

  • created

    Feb '16
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    Feb '16
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Yeah, I dislike bowden too for that reason. But dual extruder is more finicky because you can ooze (even a little) from one nozzle while printing with the other one, and especially if you have different colours, that’s pretty notable. And that’s not even speaking about tiny misalignments where one (potentially cold) nozzle hits the printed part repeatedly while printing.

Ofc. Z is the slowest of them all, but it’s not the binding factor, Z needs to do very little work. If you were to double your Z speed, would it speed up your print significantly? at least in my prints not. the Y on the other hand. is moving nearly constantly at pretty high speeds, speeding it up would speed up the whole print, but my Y is hitting the limit of my steppers/drivers, so I am limited in overall speed by the maximum speed of my Y axis, so there is no point in speeding up any other axis (even not E or Z) If I don’t speed up my Y.

If you remove the gearbox you are also reducing your steps/mm³, so you have to also account for the fact that you loose accuracy on your E. (And I think accuracy in E is important for good printing results, but might be wrong here)