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  1. #1

    Joining filament together

    Has anyone ever wanted to join there filament together? I've been wanting to do this because I have a little bit left in several roles. What would you guys suggest as the best way to do it? Should I melt it together or should I use another method? Would acetone work for this?

  2. #2
    Technician f.larsen's Avatar
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    Haven't done it before, but I will push you to try and give us a few pictures of your results, best part is, since they are small bits left over you aren't losing out on any failures

  3. #3
    Super Moderator DrLuigi's Avatar
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    Hey,

    I've seen some info about this a while ago when i was searching for a solution aswell,
    Searched it again and found some solutions.

    http://forums.reprap.org/read.php?1,205562
    http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:9850


    Well for the last one you would need a drill , aluminium, saw and a resistor, But i would say that would probably be the best solution.

    Also your Gcode wont be perfect anymore when you've done this, as your filament will easily be 0.05mm diffrent, wich is quiet a bit when your print tolerance is 0.1.
    Last edited by DrLuigi; 05-02-2014 at 03:29 PM.

  4. #4
    Super Moderator RobH2's Avatar
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    I've joined ABS together to switch rolls of filament. Without knowing the technique of just releasing the pressure on the hobbed bolt and simply pulling the filament out of the hot end I used to do the following:

    Say I was switching from black to white. I'd cut the black about 30mm above where it enters the pressure plate of the Wade extruder. I'd take a sharp exacto #11 blade and set the tip at the center of the cut and then begin to slowly twirl it. I'd slowly cut a conical shape into the end of the filament. Then, I'd sharpen the end of the new white filament so it had a point. I'd dip the sharpened end of the white into some acetone for about 5 seconds and then insert that point into the conical shape in the black and hold it still till it set, about 30-seconds. It'd then begin printing again and the white filament would follow the black in just fine. Just be careful not to torque the white filament sideways until it's past the pressure place and hobbed bolt. After the hobbed bolt has grabbed the white filament it just shoves the black down and the tip in the conical shape keeps everything aligned. It always worked very well for me.

    If want you really don't need to glue it. You can just hold the sharp tip in the conical hole until it's past the hobbed bolt and that works well too. You just have to stand there for a minute or two.
    Bambu P1S/AMS
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