Nozzle identification

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Captain Starfish
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Nozzle identification

Post by Captain Starfish »

Every day's a school day, and today's lesson is:

If you tell the slicer you have a 0.5mm nozzle and install a 0.35mm nozzle:

[img]http://planscope.io/blog/wp-content/upl ... d-time.png[/img]




Well, duh, that's pretty obvious. Except it isn't really, is it? What nozzle did I leave installed in there last time I printed? I can extrude a dribble and measure it with a mic, I can check with a 0.35 or 0.5mm drill bit and see which one doesn't fit. Both of these take a little time.

So has anyone come up with a foolproof visual ID scheme for nozzle sizes?
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Mac The Knife »

an engraver.
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Captain Starfish
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Captain Starfish »

I need to put a Dremel on my RMax, then?

:lol:
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Mac The Knife »

That sounds like trouble in the making. Make sure you post videos of its first cuts.
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Eaglezsoar
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Eaglezsoar »

You can engrave small dots on the side of the nozzles and the number of dots identify the size of the nozzles.
This is what E3D does with their version 6 nozzles and works great. This can be done by hand with a dremel tool
and you need to create a small chart that shows the nozzle size and how many dots it has. If you use the binary coded
decimal system 3 dots can identify 8 different nozzles. (no dots to 3 dots)
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Captain Starfish
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Captain Starfish »

Nice. I actually scratched three or five scratches on one face of the hex nut today, but this is neat.

I was also thinking about approaching a local exhaust place and asking for a baby pot of different colour exhaust paints for colour coding, but all of a sudden that seems unnecessarily complicated :)

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Max
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Max »

I use a center punch, 3 dots, .35mm, 5 dots .5mm
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Eaglezsoar
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Eaglezsoar »

I am glad that you liked the dot idea. :)
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by enggmaug »

I did engrave each and every of my nozzles on the sides of the hex nut : one digit per side : ".25", ".30", ".35", ".40", ".50" and ".60".

So the size is written twice on every nozzle.

This works well, but engraving is just very superficial, and it gets a bit harder to read when the nozzle is used and covered with burnt plastic.
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Captain Starfish
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by Captain Starfish »

Hah - thanks to your inspiration, everyone, I just came up with a cunning plan:

One dot.

Depending on which face gets the dot, I have up to six different sizes.

Easy and obvious!
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Re: Nozzle identification

Post by teoman »

Captain Starfish wrote:Hah - thanks to your inspiration, everyone, I just came up with a cunning plan:!
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