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2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa  

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Renan Teuman
(@renan-teuman)
Active Member
2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

Hello All,

I have a prusa coming on the way. I was wondering if anyone have used a nozzle with as wide as a 2.0mm diameter. From what I understand prusa has a different kind of nozzle then other printers, so I'm not sure if I can mount any nozzle into the prusa. 

In the help page the width goes up to 0.8mm https://help.prusa3d.com/article/different-nozzle-types_2193

If anyone can let me know if you have done this or where I can find a 2.0 mm nozzle for prusa please let me know!

 

Thank you all

Renan

Posted : 22/09/2022 1:15 pm
JoanTabb
(@joantabb)
Veteran Member Moderator
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

Prusa offer profiles for 0.25, 0.4, 0.6 and 0.8 mm nozzles.

Probably best using.0.25 nozzlesi expect 0.2 would work with the 0.25 extrusion values 

Regards Joan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I try to make safe suggestions,You should understand the context and ensure you are happy that they are safe before attempting to apply my suggestions, what you do, is YOUR responsibility. Location Halifax UK

Posted : 22/09/2022 2:21 pm
Renan Teuman
(@renan-teuman)
Active Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

Hi Joan, thanks for your reply. I need a 2 mm thick nozzle, not 0.2!

R

Posted : 22/09/2022 2:40 pm
FoxRun3D
(@foxrun3d)
Famed Member
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

I do a lot of 0.8 mm printing but haven't gone beyond that. I'd be concerned about the stock hotend's ability to melt and push filament fast enough. 

Formerly known on this forum as @fuchsr -- until all hell broke loose with the forum software...

Posted : 22/09/2022 3:19 pm
Robin
(@robin)
Noble Member
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

I don't think you can extrude 1,75mm filament through a 2,0mm nozzle, even if the hot end would generate enough heat to melt it... You would need a bottleneck in the nozzle to make sure the filament gets contact to the metal to get heated and enough pressure to fill the lower 2,0mm diameter part of the nozzle fast enough to extrude evenly- sounds very unlikely.

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Posted : 22/09/2022 3:42 pm
Ringarn67
(@ringarn67)
Reputable Member
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

I think it is impossible. I mean, filament is 1,75mm thick, how do you melt and squeeze it through a 2mm hole??
I know about 3mm filament, but that´s not for stock Prusa...

Prusa i3 MK3S+ FW 3.11.0 (kit dec -20), PrusaSlicer 2.6.1+win64, Fusion 360, Windows 10

Posted : 22/09/2022 3:50 pm
karl-herbert
(@karl-herbert)
Illustrious Member
RE:

The largest nozzle diameter available on the market is 1mm. For example, you could drill a 0.4mm nozzle to 2mm, but you will not get sufficient results with a 1.75mm filament. And even if it works, the heating element will not be able to feed enough material (limited volumetric speed).

 

( https://nozzleboss.de/?product=v6-nozzle-10mm-messing-175mm-fuer-e3d-e3dv6)

 

wbr,

Karl

Statt zu klagen, dass wir nicht alles haben, was wir wollen, sollten wir lieber dankbar sein, dass wir nicht alles bekommen, was wir verdienen.

Posted : 22/09/2022 5:02 pm
Renan Teuman
(@renan-teuman)
Active Member
Topic starter answered:
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

Thank you Karl, then I imagine the largest I can go would be around 1.5mm, if I drill 0.4mm nozzle. What do you think?

 

R

Posted : 22/09/2022 5:11 pm
karl-herbert
(@karl-herbert)
Illustrious Member
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

As I always say -> the proof of the pudding is in the eating. The 1.5mm hole should have a smooth surface and burr-free.

(left: good, right: sub-optimal)

wbr,

Karl

Statt zu klagen, dass wir nicht alles haben, was wir wollen, sollten wir lieber dankbar sein, dass wir nicht alles bekommen, was wir verdienen.

Posted : 22/09/2022 6:14 pm
K7ZPJ
(@k7zpj)
Reputable Member
RE: 2.0mm nozzle on a Prusa

Typically 3D printer that use large nozzles, use 2.85mm filament / hot ends to be able to meet the flow requirements of the larger nozzles.

Just making the nozzle size larger doesn't do any thing to increase the capacity of the  hot end so it can support that kind of flow rate.

 

 

Posted : 22/09/2022 6:53 pm
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