johnforeman wrote:So I've been googling around looking at the Bowden extruders. Is there any significant differences in the print quality or robustness of the Bowden as compared to the solidoodle extruder? I'm also seeing mention of the mk5. What is that?
At a technical level, one can argue either way on merit. In practice, they are much of a muchness once dialled in. Bowden, as it has mechanical forces applied to the filament when the head moves, can occasionally have more oozing than a direct-drive setup (for example, when the print head moves from the front to the rear).. but you can more than compensate for this by setting an appropriate 'retraction' setting..
But on the plus side, as you often gear a bowden setup (you can 1:1 it as well), you end up with a cleaner print as you dont get 'globbing' like you can with a direct 1:1 drive if you dont have perfect stepping and speed settings, you end up with thicker segments in walls...
Many printers run bowden setups.. Prusa's, Sumpods, Repraps, etc. And arguably, many of those produce higher quality prints than the Solidoodle...
The key reason you need bowden is the reduced weight - Trying to move 2 NEMA17's motors on the X/Y Carriages quickly becomes unworkable with the motors on the solidoodle - your print speed ends up having to drop to comical levels to stop motor stalling. And even if you upgrade the motors to compensate, you have considerable issues with 'overshoot' - bigger mass means greater inertia, so you tend to loose lots of quality as the head changes direction and tends to overshoot where it was supposed to stop... This isn't theoretical - its factual in that less mass means you have both quicker acceleration and quicker deceleration, which inherently provides a quicker print as well... as well as the stepper can move the platform to a fundamentally higher speed than one which has greater mass on it...
Plus, strapping two NEMA17's + Extruder Mechanisms onto the existing X-Axis would see you loose around 60mm's of build space in the x-plane... your 200mm's becomes 140mm's give or take a few mm's... With bowden, you can keep the two extruders much closer, and loose only the width of the extra extruder nozzle + a reasonable seperation between the heads (you can't put them right ontop of each other, as the heater core from one will effect the other causing all manner of temp stability issues...)
You *can* do multiple direct-drive extruders... just not with the mechanical design of the SD as it stands...