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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2024
It's an aftermarket part, so set your expectations appropriately.Using just the included parts, I did not see any significant improvements to flow rate, over stock P1S nozzles. But I didn't necessarily have reason to expect that to occur, given: the common benefits come from the high-flow nozzles that this aftermarket assembly allows you to use.The 4mm 'wrench' is trash... good enough to remove the nozzle and tighten it up, once. If you intend to use these smaller 4mm nozzles, buy a good wrench or socket and use the proper torque. Don't go too crazy with the small screws either: the allen wrench will strip with ~relative easy.I used the Slice Engineering Boron Nitride Paste and a Bondtech CHT .4mm Nozzle: to go from ~16mm^3/sec to ~30mm^3/sec: . { I run at 26mm^3/sec for a bit of safety headroom }I would predominately advise everyone to make sure that you use thermal paste, of some form, to help dissipate the heat between the thermal tube and heatsink. You can also apply paste to the nozzle threads: as I have, without issue.Just use due regard: making sure you minimize how much paste gets into the filament pathway. I put a piece of filament in the tube while assembling things, to help prevent this. But you can always clean away excess paste with Iso Alcohol and Q-tips.The additional 2 screws do help add some security against bending the hotend; but I would always recommend using a 7mm wrench to hold the hotend when tightening up the nozzle.{ Far more cost effective than the Panda Revo or E3D Obxidian options. Slice Engineering seems to also have a new pre-order Hotend that ~matches(?) the E3D hotend; but no reviews are available and their claimed flow-rate gains are not substantiated yet. }All in all, it's a great product; If you take the time to assemble it properly, it will provide you the significant flow-rate improvements that many people are seeking.
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