It smelled sort of like burnt root beer but with plastic. It didn't smell like normal ABS.

Is this a sign of melting PEEK? I had the temperature up to 260 C for a short while to try to clear out a jam.
[img]http://i.imgur.com/KEiB19G.jpg[/img]
that's interesting because I thought peek melt temperature was higher http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEEK. there's is a glass transistion temperature also maybe this is the temperature where it starts to get soft?Flateric wrote:Do not go to 260 you will melt the peek. Trust me on this one, that is well into the melt peek zone!
Cambo3d and Flateric are both correct. The numbers Cambo3d gave are right on. There are users on this forum who state that they run at 260 and I guarantee they don't run for long at that temperature. I thinkcambo3d wrote:that's interesting because I thought peek melt temperature was higher http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEEK. there's is a glass transistion temperature also maybe this is the temperature where it starts to get soft?Flateric wrote:Do not go to 260 you will melt the peek. Trust me on this one, that is well into the melt peek zone!
Looking at the wiki page for j heads, it says peek starts melting at 248 degrees celcius. http://www.reprap.org/wiki/Materials
according to this I probably woudn't go above 240 or maybe even 230 degrees to give you room for error.
I planned to do this in order to see what temperature difference there was and adjust firmware/software as needed. use of the second hole in the hotend for a thermocouple could come in handy.Polygonhell wrote: The only accurate way to measure temperature is to put a thermocouple in the nozzle, almost no one does this when they calibrate, so almost no one knows how accurate the thermistor is or isn't.
There is a second hole in the Al heater block and I've checked that with a thermocouple, all it tells you is if the thermistor is calibrated against it's spec sheet, unfotunately it doesn't tell you what the temperature difference between the location of the thermistor and various other parts of the hotend are.cambo3d wrote:I planned to do this in order to see what temperature difference there was and adjust firmware/software as needed. use of the second hole in the hotend for a thermocouple could come in handy.Polygonhell wrote: The only accurate way to measure temperature is to put a thermocouple in the nozzle, almost no one does this when they calibrate, so almost no one knows how accurate the thermistor is or isn't.
I bought this one from amazon http://www.amprobe.com/amprobe/usen/HVA ... ?PID=73400 it has two thermocouple inputs. maybe use one for heatbed and one for the hotend, maybe permanently mount the thermocouple, if you wanted to.