Because I have 3mm filament, I believe I'm at a geometric disadvantage in how much I can shorten the barrel length. Because the tip of the nozzle is tapered, my 1/8" drill bit will leave me with a much thinner cross-section and I'm more likely to blow the entire bottom out. Here's my next test with the flange of the nozzle snugged up against the heater block to promote heat transfer. I'll have to wait on my machinist friend to attempt to drill it out.mhackney wrote:ceramichammer, your photo clearly shows how little contact surface the E3D nozzle has! The base of the nozzle itself does not snug up against the heated block by design and on top of that, there is an untreated section right above that so heat isn't able to transfer conductively until the first thread (the lowest in your photo). Then, there are only 5 threads total. That is not a lot of conductive pathway!
A quick update: printed all day at 185-195°C with NO filament starving on parts that are usually problematic. On top of that, I started ramming the speed up and was successfully printing at 60mm/s the tenkara line holders I manufacture - again, with no filament starving.
[img]http://i.imgur.com/EEnY6bql.jpg[/img]