6 hours, 3 burnt fingers and a lot of frustration later, Israelis got my money.
Received my E3d yesterday.
Assembled it with no issues, although fan mount is very loose on heat sink.
Updated firmware on SD3 with no issues. And that is where the problems started:
The hot end id not fit into supplied extruder, so i actually ended up mounting it up side down, because it did fit that way. any ways, after unbolting the extruder and taking out the hot end i filled off the excess ABS which was preventing hot end fitting in the correct way. Who ever is printing these extruders, check your z-axis calibration... After fussing with the extruder/hotend mounting, filling some ABS off with a rasp i ended up squeezing hot end into xtruder, but due to excess pressure, i broke the fan... No big deal, 9v battery and 80mm fan can be a temp fix...
OK, now we in business, i thought. Connected the electronics, powered the thing up, reading ambient temp at ambient, good. time to warm things up. Placed 80mm fan near hot end, cooling the hot end warmed it up to 225C and shoved some ABS in it. Lo and behold it is extruding, but at about 10 times slower than it should. OK, no biggie, i'll calibrate it and play with tension arm. After trying multiple tensions and extruding some ABS my calibration results were shocking, i went from 108 steps per mm to 1500 steps per mm. Needless to say stepper motor does not like that... Ok, disassemble again and try to use different bolt on the bearing to improve tension. That works. Now my arm is not all the way pressed against the bracket, just t o make contact with the stepper wheel. I had to force a bigger screw into the tension arm, actually cracking one side, the screw that fits well is too thin to properly hold the circular bearing...
OK, how we are all in business, except, no. The toothed gear on the stepper is now filled with abs it chewed off in last 6 hours, so it just slides along the fillament, instead of feeding it. And ofcourse the little dinkey piece of ABS that is supposed to hold the hot end in place got too toasty and is now so loose that the hot end of my hotend has about 0.5 inches of play in it.
And that is why isralies got my money for all metal extuder+hotend.
Overall i must say that e3d v5 hotend feels solid and worthy the $70, but it needs a real fan mount and a real extruder, not printed in a rush parts that shipped with it. Not complaining, the extruder i got was free, so can't complain, but it was just low enough quality that it ruined my experience with e3d hot end. E3D needs a real, laser cut or CNC cut mount and a proper mounted fan adapter.