3dprinting·3DPrintingbycharles Something tells me I overtightened the nozzleTwisting it on hot and the nozzle fell to the bed. I thought "huh, guess I was turning it the wrong way..." Nope.View original on lemmy.world59Comments9
ppixls merv.news1Hide 1 replyFrom the pic it looks like cross threading rather than over tightening. Always makes sure it threads smooth before you start tightening13
SShdwdrgn mander.xyz1Hide 1 replyI have a socket and extension I keep by the printer which fits the nozzle. That way I can screw it in by hand while hot, still easily feel if something is binding, and I don't even have to burn off my fingertips.3
MehStrongBadMeh programming.dev1Hide 1 replyBeen there before. Thankfully, replacement blocks are pretty cheap.3
charles replylemmy.worldYeah, I've already spent like $60 trying to help a guy save $10. What's another $20 on the pile? Lol.1
eelrs_failsafe lemmy.worldDid the same with Trianglelab Dragon. Damaged the heatbreak as well when disassembling the hotend. Now I own a 1.8Nm torque wrench..2
From the pic it looks like cross threading rather than over tightening. Always makes sure it threads smooth before you start tightening
It felt like it was in there fine to me, but maybe not.
maybe it's hotend upgrade time then
I have a socket and extension I keep by the printer which fits the nozzle. That way I can screw it in by hand while hot, still easily feel if something is binding, and I don't even have to burn off my fingertips.
Good idea, I'll give that a go.
Been there before. Thankfully, replacement blocks are pretty cheap.
Yeah, I've already spent like $60 trying to help a guy save $10. What's another $20 on the pile? Lol.
Did the same with Trianglelab Dragon. Damaged the heatbreak as well when disassembling the hotend. Now I own a 1.8Nm torque wrench..