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Topic: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

Thanks to everyone who has been posting their repair tips, you've been a real help keeping my Solidoodle 2 operational over the past year.

Last spring I replaced the hot end with the "new" aluminum one... the heat core is similar to this one

store.solidoodle.com/index.php?route=product/product&path=63&product_id=81

A week ago the heating element burned out. Thanks to some posts on this forum I was able to identify it as a 6.8 ohm, 3 watt resistor. I also discovered that having the resistor burn out is apparently not uncommon.

I ordered a few different resistors from Digikey and this one fit nicely. With a bit of thermal grease I've had it in installed and running for an hour or so. (Knock on wood that I'm not jinxing myself by posting this...)

digikey.ca/product-detail/en/RWM04106R80JR15E1/RWMA-6.8CT-ND/1587898

The part number, if that link doesn't work (which it won't because apparently I'm "Allowed 0 links" was RWMA-6.8CT-ND, and manufacturer part number was RWM04106R80JR15E1

Buying ten of them, they cost about 81 cents each.

Note that I didn't remove the heater core or hot end (I didn't want to have to recalibrate the Z axis... I had it working nicely already) so I just snipped out the old resistor, put some solder and heat shrink on the new one, slid it into place and then connected the red terminal. I have a crimping tool for that, so it was pretty easy, but otherwise just leave some wire on the old socket when you take out the burned out resistor and solder the new resistor directly to the old connector.

Hope that helps anyone looking for a replacement... Digikey can get the parts to you overnight.

Jason

Hmmm... I'm apparently not allowed to put links in my posts... so apologies for those links not working. "Too more links in message. Allowed 0 links." was the error message. Guess you'll have to copy and paste into your browser.

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

How did you pop the old resistor out?  I have a block where one of the legs sheared off and I'm trying to replace it.  Problem is the old resistor is like it's almost permanently affixed in the block.  Not quite sure how to go about this.

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

Did you try tapping it out with an appropriately sized bolt or steel rod?

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

Pulling with pliers, hitting it with said pliers, but no... using a punch never even occured to me... LOL

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

The heating resistor popped out nicely for me... just a little pulling and pushing and it (and some dried up thermally conductive grease) came right out.

I'm up to 8 hours or so with the new resistor and it seems to be working nicely. I never timed it, but it seems to heat up slightly more quickly than with the old resistor, but that may be related to a new coating of thermally-conductive grease rather than the resistor.

It may also have been that a cause of failure of the old resistor was that the old grease was no longer providing proper thermal conduction, requiring the resistor to run at higher temperatures in order to transfer enough heat to the extruder.

It has me wondering if it would be worthwhile to check and refresh the thermally conductive grease on a regular basis. I'd be curious to know that Solidoodle does at their printer farm, and what kind of failure rates they have been experiencing.

Jason

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

I am going to replace  the resistor with a heat cartridge. Specs say it's 6mm in diameter. I measured the hole  in my heat block. It's closer to 7mm. My question is , what's the best thing  to use to fill in the gap? Some have said to wrap aluminum around it and I read others said use fire cement.Just wondering if  hi temp (650f) silicone gasket maker would work?

SD3, E3D hotend,linear bearing on x/y axis',pillow block bearing on y conneting rod, ball bearngs on front y axis, fan on y stepper motor.

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

satman49 wrote:

I am going to replace  the resistor with a heat cartridge. Specs say it's 6mm in diameter. I measured the hole  in my heat block. It's closer to 7mm. My question is , what's the best thing  to use to fill in the gap? Some have said to wrap aluminum around it and I read others said use fire cement.Just wondering if  hi temp (650f) silicone gasket maker would work?

The goal is to transfer the heat into the block so I wouldn't use silicone gasket maker.  Foil or better yet fire cement are the way to go.

Printit Industries Model 8.10 fully enclosed CoreXY, Chamber heat
3-SD3's & a Workbench all fully enclosed, RH-Slic3r Win7pro, E3D V6, Volcano & Cyclops Hot End
SSR/500W AC Heated Glass Bed, Linear bearings on SS rods. Direct Drive Y-axis, BulldogXL
Thanks to all for your contributions

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Re: Extruder Heater Resistor Replacement: Digikey Part Number

The rtv's heat range upper limit is 650F but this is where it starts burn... the heat cartridge will go above that all the time even if you set the pid controller lower as the controller only sees what the sensor is at and it is mounted a ways from the heat cartridge.

fire cement is very cheap and you can usually find it just about anywhere like at hardware stores or ebay.