
(or at least it used to look like that at some point in the past)
Interesting -- I would have tough the opposite...Anders Olsson wrote: This is bad news for the ruby, since ruby and sapphire are also aluminum oxide
No wonder that those sponges seems to scratch everything in their way..
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I think I will recommend something like steel wool for cleaning nozzles, have to do more testing first though.
I from time to time put the nozzle in a pan with cooking water, leave it there for a while. As it boils, the nozzle jumps around an releases the residues (a bit) after that, while still hot, I clean it with a needle and also filament (atomic outside the printer). Works okay for me only using PLA. I gues, that would also not be a problem for the ruby nozzle?Amedee wrote: What about the 'Korneel' method (burning all residues with a microflame burner)?
... sorry?LePaul wrote:Who knew a kitchen sponge would prove to be Kryptonite to the might ruby nozzle
Steel is much softer than aluminum oxide and steel wool is made from very fine fibers, so I would not expect steel wool to damage the ruby.Amedee wrote:Interesting -- I would have tough the opposite...Anders Olsson wrote: I think I will recommend something like steel wool for cleaning nozzles, have to do more testing first though.
What about the 'Korneel' method (burning all residues with a microflame burner)?
Yeah, that is exactly why I started this thread. It is very difficult to come up with tests that matches what real users will do to a nozzleTitus wrote:@Anders, funny how a seemingly harmless kitchen tool destroys the rubyThough this is useful testing!