Don't forget to change your z offset after swapping nozzles
Don't forget to change your z offset after swapping nozzles
Thankfully, It’s okay. Ish.
My prints want to unstick a bit there, but overall it’s still working! The poor thing.
My probe hits my z endstop, so similar idea. I preheat my probe and manually wipe it before I home. Any ooze doesn’t really make a difference in first layer. At some point I’ll print a purge bucket and nozzle brush…
My endstop is just a metal rod, but since it’s cold filament doesn’t stick to it. If I were probing my bed I would probably want a hot nozzle and cold bed.
Switched over to Revo nozzles on all my printers. Didn’t have to adjust my z-offset since then, neither did I have any issues with print quality.
They are pricy but I prefer a stress-free solution over a cheaper one.
btw, what you’re seeing there is actually brass shavings. That glass bed is like sandpaper to your nozzle. I’d closely inspect it because you’ve likely rolled the brass over the tip by doing this.
Seriously, look at it closer and you’ll see bits of brass. That’s why the color is the way it is.
Additionally – you shouldn’t have this problem so long as you’ve actually rebuilt your hot end correctly. Nozzles have a standard (in the case of the Ender it’s a MK8) and generally even the cheap chinese ones follow that standard very well.
Thanks for the detail!
Fortunately, in this case I was using a brand new, low-quality nozzle I don’t really care about.
After this, I did indeed notice that I hadn’t tightened the nozzle fully tight and I had some mild “drizzle” escaping down the side.
Since then, I’ve
and… It’s printing fine again.
Even the nozzle was alright… entirely due to dumb luck. 🤦