3 points

Larger nozzles do kick ass. I personally use my 0.6 nozzles pretty heavily. As others have mentioned though, there are definitely scenarios where you’ll really want or even need to drop to a smaller size. My printer hates trying to print PETG at higher sizes for example, maybe my hot end isn’t powerful enough.

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0 points

it also consumes way more filament- especially on single-wall parts or parts that have x perimeters rather than a perimeter thickness. They’re great for structural prints, and large prints that you want done quickly. For comparison, a .4mm nozzle will have a nozzle area of about 0.125 mm^2, where a 0.6mm is .28 mm^2. and .8mm is .502mm^2. More than double the extrusion width.

like basically everything else in 3d printing, it’s all about compromise and which compromises are acceptable.

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1 point
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No, I don’t agree with consumes ‘way more’ filament.

If your design calls for 1mm width wall. You’re doing two passes with a 0.4 nozzle (0.5 width x2) or one pass with a 0.8 nozzle (1 width x1)

It’s the same plastic.

You’ll use more plastic on the infill, but you could arguably use a lower % infill if the infill wall thickness is larger.

So you could be using more plastic overall, but I don’t think it would qualify as ‘way more’… maybe like 10% to 20% more.

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3 points

Tell us about your hotend?

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2 points

Ever try 1.0?

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1 point

Wow! That’s awesome! What additional modifications were needed?

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1 point

Ever try 1.0…
On weed?

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2 points

Combination of line width, layer height and speed is what limits your hottend, not the nozzle size

Wanted to reply to another comment, but its saying that language is not alliwed lol

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1 point

Wow! That’s awesome! What additional modifications were required?

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