I finished assembling my extruder. It seems to work, but I have no pellets yet. First of all, it's great. Thanks everybody who participated. I am going to write a summary of troubles I had and I understand it will sound grumpy — well, it is not. Extruder is a fine thing, just a not-so-little rough around the edges.
*Since wooden parts are not surface finished, I have covered them with linseed oil. Only after the full assembly I realized I choose the most flammable finishing I could. Ouch!
*The bolt on the auger collar is grinding the wood. I hope it will soon grind a groove and run free. Had I placed the collar the other side up - the bolt would get stuck in the wood.
*The 'everything included to the last nut' claim is exaggerated. Had it not been there,I would have not mind it, but I needed some extra nails, hot glue gun, and, most important, 4-wire clamps. Those would require a trip to hardware store for most people.
*Electric box STL needs revising. It is wiggly, even with 75% infill, definitely needs a hole to screw it to bottom plate, and wire holes would be better being half-holes at the bottom (sorry, don't know the proper english word) so that you would not need to detach wire to move it to another side.
*Hopper STL in my case was not snug at all, it rotates freely and holds on duct tape only.
*Main pipe does not stop threading into flange — it goes all through it easily. I have yet to see if molten plastic would rotate pipe or not. If yes, I will need some extra clamps.
*Electronics is a mess. First of all, do you suggest people should connect wires by twisting them together? Inside the box? Especially that 5 wire intersection point? That's exactly what one should not be doing EVER. You must provide wire clamps like Wago. Three are required - one for 5 wire, one for 4, one for 3, to avoid twisting inside the box. I took all three for 5 wires, no problem.
*By the way, does this power supply have short circuit detection?
*And by the way, what will happen if thermal couple breaks loose while unattended? Will heater try to heat up to red glow?
*The bits used to attach wires to switches are of low quality — I broke three of them while installing. The average man who has a solder would revert to it in this situation. So I suggest you add a precaution to the list against this. Something like "You may not sold wires to switches, unless you know why you may not, in which case you may, but only if you know how to" I am serious.
*Motor sound changes when heater is on and off. This, and power supply being hot, suggests that power supply is overloaded, which is not good. I will measure the actual current later.
*I ordered 4 nozzle ends. One with 1.75 hole has it drilled at slight angle. I will have to test if it affects production.
*Controller would really use some fine tuning. It is too fast now. Again, I will post a guide on this when I get OK with settings.
*This forum has weird formatting buttons, so I use asterisks.