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Every time I attempt to use a abrasion resistant hardened tool-steel nozzle I run into a huge number of problems... the heat transfer difference between Brass and steel is huge and I end up with really poor quality prints, clogging, etc.

Everyone says that a if you print glow-in-the-dark or wood fiber or carbon fiber that you will blow out your brass nozzle super quick... when I first ran into these problems I just switched back to brass and decided to throw out the nozzle and replace when it became a problem... the brass nozzles are so cheap I just did not see the point. This has served me well, but I was always printing fairly small parts. I'm about to dive into a RC plane project with some fairly large carbon fiber parts with multi-day print times and I am worried about wearing out the brass nozzle mid-print and I am wondering if I should revisit hardened tool-steel nozzles.

Every time I attempt to use a abrasion resistant hardened tool-steel nozzle I run into a huge number of problems... the heat transfer difference between Brass and steel is huge and I end up with really poor quality prints, clogging, etc. Everyone says that a if you print glow-in-the-dark or wood fiber or carbon fiber that you will blow out your brass nozzle super quick... when I first ran into these problems I just switched back to brass and decided to throw out the nozzle and replace when it became a problem... the brass nozzles are so cheap I just did not see the point. This has served me well, but I was always printing fairly small parts. I'm about to dive into a RC plane project with some fairly large carbon fiber parts with multi-day print times and I am worried about wearing out the brass nozzle mid-print and I am wondering if I should revisit hardened tool-steel nozzles.

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[–] 0 pt

Yes, they work great. Hardened steel are the only nozzles that I use.

Be sure to ONLY get E3D as other manufacturers don't drill properly.