Thanks for your suggestion. I’m sure that would work as well but perhaps not economical. The reason why I want to explore cold pulling on the Zortrax is because I don’t want to spend so much money on nozzles. Zortrax’s nozzles are not that cheap so if there is a way to remove the carbon residue effectively I would like to explore that option.
When the nozzle gets to around 120 degrees, the filament will start to release from the nozzle
Now pull the whole filament out.
When I’ve done this using ABS, it usually has a perfect image of the inside of the nozzle, including a small amount of 0.4mm that is pulled from inside the actual nozzle hole itself.
Using PLA usually doesn’t work as well.
Another trick is to push a heap of filament down into the nozzle as it’s cooling, this means less chance of an air bubble forming when the filament is cold. Then when you do a pull there’s more chance of getting the bit that’s near to the end of the nozzle.
You are awesome! Thanks! Sounds plausible. I will even try it tonight as nozzle maintenance. I’m guessing you’s have to remove the filament feeder right?
I’ve tried this technique yesterday evening on my Zortrax M200 and the filament keeps breaking off before the heated block. Did you try this on the Zortrax or on another printer? It seems to me that the passage before the heated block is smaller than the passage after the heated block. It may be physically impossible to perform this procedure on the M200.