Comment on Help please: heating block gooed up with PLA
gafu@techhub.social 1 day agoIts not about torque only.
If build up correct, the nozzle flange does not touch the aluminium heater block. There must be a gap, can be a tiny gap.
You dont want to screw the nozzle against the block, but you want to screw the nozzle backside face (around the filament bore) against the heatbreak end face. This is the place where you close the oozing hole, the threads are not tight against liquid plastic.
Prunebutt@slrpnk.net 1 day ago
So that means I need to teardown the extruder and check the seal of the heatbreak?
Fenderfreek@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Sort of. As the previous poster pointed out, you need to make sure it’s assembled in a way that the nozzle is seated against the heat break inside the heater block, not against the heater block itself. You’ll have to do a complete disassembly to clean it up properly, and you may need to run a tap through the heater block to clean the threads, but when you assemble it, make sure that you back the nozzle off a turn or so, assemble the hot end so that the heater break is bottomed out against the nozzle, then heat it all up and torque the nozzle up snugly to the heatbreak. There are YouTube vids that will demonstrate hotend assembly better than I can explain it, but solid nozzle to heatbreak seal is critical for preventing this
Prunebutt@slrpnk.net 1 day ago
I’ve cleaned the outside, but I don’t know what you mead by that. Could you explain how I fix the threading?
Fenderfreek@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
Most nozzles and heat breaks have M6x1mm threads, so they’re pretty standard (double check yours specifically). Lightly chasing the heat break threads with a tap should clean out any gunk and ensure that your heatbreak and nozzle threads engage properly when you reassemble everything again, and that things get torqued together correctly.