I have another one if neccessary, but I think the screw shafts on it are clogged with plastic, so it might take some work as well.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      13 months ago

      Thanks, after inspecting the clog this seems like the ideal thing to try. I also think I might know how this happened now too, the filament dryer might have heated the room to a temperature where heat creep was easier.

  • @[email protected]
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    33 months ago

    I’ve used the torch and cold pull methods successfully, but have had great luck with a cheap set of acupuncture needles from Amazon. I would pre-heat on the printer and just poke the needle in there a bit and feed filament through.

  • @[email protected]
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    43 months ago

    I use a heat gun to get the filament just soft enough , then use tweezers to pull off big chunks. A vice helps here, you can clamp the heat block while you’re heating, then use pliers or a wrench to unscrew the heatbreak and the nozzle. Once the parts are separated, you can drop the parts in a glass jar of acetone, and that will break down the filament so you can get the rest off with a brass wire brush. Just don’t dunk the thermal sensor or heater element in the acetone. The metal parts will be fine, but the insulation on the wires could be damaged depending on composition. I’ve saved and rebuilt several hotends this way - it’s great to not have to be ordering hotend parts all the time. 😁

    • @[email protected]OP
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      23 months ago

      I don’t think I have acetone, but if I try other things and they don’t work then I’ll try this.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        What type of filament? Acetone doesn’t do much to things like pla or petg, stuff that works aren’t things you generally want around the house, industrial solvents and stuff. The jar of acetone can soften it up some but you’ll need to soak for some time, I’ve used MEK too, but that’s in the “don’t keep that at home” category, it’s really flammable and should use ppe (I mean should use ppe for a lot of the stuff we use, 99% IPA is harsh on your skin, I use nitriles because it irritates my hands something fierce.)

        Cold pull as others recommended, nozzles are consumables, def should keep some around. Cleaning filament works pretty well in my experience if you have a partial clog.

        I’ve been there though, first block I didn’t use a sock and the set screws got encased in degraded petg, I ended up scrapping it and putting it on the shelf as a learning moment, def recommend a sock if you don’t have, it’s saved me a lot of grief.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          It definitely works on PETG, PLA and most other plastics. I use it on some of my prints that need to be watertight. It leaks through the tiny cracks and seals them. Have you actually used acetone on any of these filaments…? I use them regularly for this purpose and I can’t understand why you would say it “doesn’t do much”…?

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            Softening and that, maybe? But it really depends on the filament brand too, as far as I’m aware, acetone doesn’t readily dissolve in acetone which is what’s meant by not doing much

            Petg is pretty resistant, why PETs used for bottles.

            Personal experience cleaning up clogged nozzles by immersing them, yeah acetone barely touched the petg

        • @[email protected]OP
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          23 months ago

          Yep, I do have a sock, but one time the filament ended up just building up inside the sock, so it hasn’t been too helpful lol

          • @[email protected]
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            23 months ago

            Mmmm, yeah that sucks, that first block I mentioned was an older style that wasn’t fixed in place and I must have twisted it accidentally after a nozzle change, super slow leak just enveloped the thing, didn’t help there either!

  • JM⭐
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    33 months ago

    Blowtorch, just be careful of the wires and try to get the thermistor and heater out first.

  • @[email protected]
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    33 months ago

    My old i3 clone came with a 1mm steel rod I use in these situations. Leave the extruder on your printer, cut the filament off, heat up the extruder to a normal printing temp, and push the gunk through the nozzle. If you have a cold side clog you’re probably going to have to add heat from something like a heat gun.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      3 months ago

      I tried this, but the filament doesn’t seem to fuse or connect very much; I also tried with this thing

      and I also didn’t seem to be able to push it into the hotend through the extruder.