pirvan wrote:It's not the money, that's for sure. Here is my view on the E3D, which will probably not be very popular.
I've personally never had any (major) problems with the original hot end, and since I only print ABS and have no interest in printing with other materials (at the moment), I see no reason to change.
I personally don't believe it can improve your printing quality. I know many people swear by it, but to me this is more of a placebo effect. Most of those that went with an E3D, did so because the hype around it, and because they were having so many printing problems they believed that this would be the end all, be all, that will magically make their printer work.
It's not. In fact for most beginners that (the hot end) is NOT the first thing they should change, there are many other things wrong with the printer that need changing, but the print head is not one of them.
Additionally, most of those that did do the upgrade, also changed other things at the same time (like the extruder & carriage), that they have no idea what it was that made their printer work better than before, but they think it was the hot end, because they believe in the hype.
Contrary to the popular belief HERE, the MG Plus hot end is well regarded in the RepRap community as a good workhorse. The quality of the heater block, and the way Solidoodle chose to attach the thermistor are questionable, but the MG design is solid. I've always had good quality prints and the problems I'm currently experiencing are due to other factors (vref or hysteresis issues for my banding, or crap filament for clogging).
In my point of view, the E3D, and other similar all-metal hot ends, are a good upgrade for the advanced users that want to print exotic materials such as nylon, metallic or similar materials that require hotter temps. Most users though, will settle for ABS or PLA, and they really have no need for a E3D/all metal hot end, which introduces its own issues that these very same users are not really prepared to deal with like flashing firmware, re-adjusting the print bed height, Printing a new Extruder, which inevitably leads to printing new carriage for it, which leads to the replacement of the rods, since the stock don't work well with linear bearings, etc, etc.
In fact, for most users I would recommend a "fix" to existing hot end, but only if they're having extrusion problems. Get a new heater block and a cartridge heater. About $6-7 worth of parts, and replace the aluminum heater block and the heater resistor with these new parts, leaving the rest intact. 10 minute fix, no firmware, not new extruder parts, no new calibrations, just plug and play.
In all honesty - I can agree with with this.
I had my stock hotend dialed in pretty well on my SD4 and was getting some very nice looking prints out of it, and had only clogged once in the time I have had this printer (was my own fault for leaving it on & idle for too long) - and I changed colors & materials frequently (ABS to PLA & back again)
When we did the "upgrade" to the E3D, I was actually kind of disappointed in the prints I was getting - it required a LOT more tweaking to get rid of the vref banding - in fact, I had to order an 8825 stepper driver for the extruder to get rid of 99% of it... still have just a tiny bit yet, but it is close. I came very close to yanking the E3D off and putting the stock back on prior to changing the stepper driver...I was that frustrated and disappointed. Now that it is dialed in better, I do like it, but it was frustrating to get to this point.
I have also had to re-figure all of my temp settings for the various colors I use - each one is slightly different... so lots of calibration cubes have been printed... I keep a log for each roll/color of the best temp, filament diameter, extruder steps/mm, and extrusion multiplier to make future color changes a little quicker.
So far I have only run ABS thru the E3D - almost afraid of switching back and forth to the PLA like I used to do...
But, that said, the one really nice thing (for me), as someone has already mentioned, is that the change from one color to the next is very quick with the E3D - I only need to extrude around 50-60mms to get complete color change vs the nearly 200mm I needed with the stock hotend, so a lot less filament wasted when swapping colors.
We had considered going with the E3D lite, but after some discussion about future filament use decided to go with the v6 instead. We would like to try nylon, and some other materials, down the road, so it made sense to go with the hotend capable of doing those things.
98% of my mods were done prior to getting the E3D - and, as I said, I was getting pretty darn good results with the stock hotend. And, just because I could, I left all of the stock wiring in place so I can easily swap back if I ever decide to. I even modded the E3D mount so I could continue using the stock tensioner parts (aluminum tension arm, bearing & stock spring) making a swap back even easier - unscrew one mount, screw the other on - 2 whole screws, plug in some wiring and done (oh yeah, and some firmware changes).
So, as pirvan suggested, unless you are having some major problems with the stock hotend, or really want/need the higher temps, then leave well enough alone. Take the time to get things calibrated correctly and the stock part will perform just fine.
There are other mods that will go a lot further toward improving print quality than changing the hotend - such as the linear bearing carriages...by far the best mod done to our SD4. 2nd best was adding a fan to the X motor (eliminated skipped steps due to the motor overheating), and 3rd would be the bed stabilizer.
SD4 #1 & #2 - Lawsy carriages, E3D v6, Rumba controller board, mirror bed plate, X motor fan, upgraded PSU & Mica bed heater
SD4 #3 - in the works ~ Folgertech FT-5, rev 1
Printit Industries Beta Tester - Horizon H1