Update (12.17.15 6:00 PM PST): I attached a thermistor to the flange of the aluminum retaining nut that accepts the hotend and monitored the temperature during and after a print with the stainless steel t-slot nut acting as a heatsink. During the print, the temperature held steady at about 31-32ºC. Once the print ended, the head moved up and the fan shut off, the temperature began to quickly moved up to 82ºC as the hotend dumped it's heat into the aluminum nut.
I have now attached an aluminum heatsink (as seen below) and run another print. This time the temperature of the aluminum retaining nut stayed at about 24ºC, just above the ambient temperature, during the print. The post print temperature only rose to about 52ºC, which, even accounting for the fact that it would be somewhat higher internally, would not be enough to cause the filament to jam in the nut. Update: On further testing, with different parts, the temperature post print does go to 77ºC. Will need to try a larger aluminum heatsink.
Update (12.20.15 3:59 AM PST): I managed to fabricate a larger heatsink (48g of aluminum) which was sufficient to resolve the issue. However, it's an impractical solution for the average MOD-t owner. Reluctantly, I have decided to update the Slic3r config to force the fan to full power at the end of a print and wait for the hotend to cool down to 28ºC before actually reaching the end of the gcode file. This is a clunky solution and obviously doesn't help a user who is printing from the cloud service or using a different slicer (though the same fix could be added.) As mentioned above, a firmware update that keeps the fan on until the hotend has cooled would also mitigate this issue.
The real solution would be a redesigned print head which incorporates dedicated active cooling for the hotend feed tube (heatsink w/ always on fan) and new mounting nut that provides a thermal break.
So your filament is jammed. You can't print or even unload the filament. There are a couple of threads in this forum describing how to disassemble the head and clear the jam. Theoretically that method would void your warranty, though frankly, NewMatter would be nuts to try and enforce it at this point.There is another way to clear the jam which doesn't require disassembly. But first, a little bit about what is happening:The nut where the hotend attaches to the head (you know, the one mentioned in the cutesy video about changing the hotend) also serves as a transition and guide to get the filament from the extruder to the hotend. Well, due to what I'm going to stride out on a solid steel platform and call a fundamental, flabbergasting design flaw, that nut is getting warm enough for PLA to soften. And when more filament is pushed in behind it by the extruder, the softened PLA will expand and get stuck. The servo driven extruder is not nearly powerful enough to push or pull the filament once it gets jammed in the nut. Trying to run the load/unload sequences or even my clearnozzle.gcode will do nothing but cause the extruder's hobbed bolt/drive gear to grind filament, which will only make matters worse. So, DON'T!To clear this type of jam, your'e going to need a soldering iron or some other way to apply heat directly to the nut. If you don't have a soldering iron, a large flat head screw driver heated by your gas or electric stove might work too... But, really, you bought a 3D Printer (crappy as it may be), you're a maker now..., get yourself a decent soldering iron - it will come in handy! (I have several, but this Aoyue 937 is quite nice for the price. A cheap 40W unit will work too.) We only need to heat the nut to about 160-170ºC to soften up most PLA.The idea is to apply enough heat to the nut to soften the PLA that's jammed so you can pull it out. Here are the steps:
- First, detach the filament feeder tube from the MOD-t print head.
- Then, pull out five or six inches of filament from your spool, so it protrudes from the top of the print head such that you have enough to grab and pull by hand.
- Now, cut off the filament and detach the spool and holder from the MOD-t.
- Disconnect power/USB and lay MOD-t on it's back.
- Apply heat to the retaining nut with your soldering iron or alternate heat source. I set my digital soldering iron to 350ºC to make short work of the job of transferring enough heat.
- Be careful here as the main body of the print head is plastic and you don't want to touch it with your heat source.
- Nor do you want to overheat the nut, as that could damage the internal interface to the extruder housing which is also plastic.
- Eventually, you should be able to pull the filament out by the slack you left above the MOD-t head. It may help to have a second pair of hands, one set to pull while supporting the head and another to apply the heat source.
Note: You can try to avoid this type of jam from happening by always unloading filament immediately after a print.More about the cause:Looked in to trying to mitigate this with slicer settings. This isn't solvable with gcode because the jam is happening after gcode has finished running. The auto cooling done by the slicer is kind of irrelevant here, but it doesn't hurt to leave the fan on all the time with PLA and that's why I've changed the Slic3r config to do so. (You can just go to Filament Settings>Cooling and enable 'Keep fan always on' in Slic3r without having to reload the config.)
The problem here is that the nut is aluminum and, when the print stops, the still warm hotend sinks all it's heat in to the nut. This could be mitigated by having the firmware keep the fan on after a print until the hotend has cooled. That assumes that the user doesn't turn off the MOD-t after use though.
Basically, this is a horrendous design flaw. Fatal really. It will eventually effect every user, even with a firmware fix.
G92 E0
M106 S255 ; Turn fan on to 100%
G0 Z130 F300; Go high
G0 X77.7 Y52.3 F3000
G92 X0 Y0 ; Change Offset back to center
G0 X0 Y50 F3000; Go front and center
M109 S28 ; Wait for hotend to cool
M104 S0 ; Turn off temperature
M107 ; Turn off fan
M84 ; Disable motors
M106 S255 ; Turn fan on to 100%M109 S28 ; Wait for hotend to cool
G0 Z130 F300; Go highJust happened to me after my 5th or 6th print. And drat, my soldering iron is in storage. Guess it is an excuse to go get a new one :)
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "MOD-t" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/mod-t/Pgdlp3kf2pQ/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to mod-t+un...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mod-t/211cd9a6-dd0a-4107-a8e7-916e73c419ab%40googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
it sat just long enough to congeal and now I've got a 2nd RMA to do)
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "MOD-t" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/mod-t/Pgdlp3kf2pQ/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to mod-t+un...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mod-t/32eb6ba3-9e7b-44a1-9256-1cd8b1c0e8c2%40googlegroups.com.
Pictures or it didn't happen...
My current plan is to laser cut a new top plate out of acrylic and print mounts for magnets to hold it in place. None of my local sources had small, 24v blower fans so I had to order them from Amazon and they won't arrive until 02.22.
On Thursday, February 18, 2016 at 7:07:00 PM UTC-8, JP wrote:I've already taken to modifying my carriage to prevent easier access...basically cutting apart flat areas where theres no need without compromising support. I might have to reinforce some areas but that shouldn't be a problem..
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "MOD-t" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/mod-t/Pgdlp3kf2pQ/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to mod-t+un...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mod-t/07e220da-f541-4498-a6f0-e50a16212cca%40googlegroups.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "MOD-t" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/mod-t/Pgdlp3kf2pQ/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to mod-t+un...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mod-t/464dd125-abaa-4993-b172-709f0f8af070%40googlegroups.com.