Two of my extruders have been destroyed when the teflon threads gave
way. In one instance the temp was around 240C but in the other
instance the temp was only about 210C but the bot had been printing
continuously for approx. four hours.
After the second meltdown
http://www.flickr.com/photos/makergear/3948098514/
I created an alternate design that uses the teflon rod as an insulator
but not as a structural unit (not threaded)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/makergear/3948315803/in/photostream/
As you can see - two nuts are used to lock the lower washer into
position and compression is used to hold the teflon rod in place. The
teflon is not threaded, the brass rod simply slides in (i think i have
it going in about half an inch) and the top ~0.5mm of the teflon is
turned to fit into the washer and press against the acrylic. There is
one layer of ceramic tape between the upper washer (connected directly
to the acrylic) and acyrlic as a precaution. The two long screws
(stainless, have not tried black oxide) seem to do a good job as
heatsinks as the upper portions of the screws are not getting hot
(running for a while at 210C).
This approach uses two washers (one with four holes), two M6 nuts and
a small piece of ceramic tape. The acrylic piece used to attach the
lower washer the upper unit is no longer needed.