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Not your mother's extruder! Kidding... This simple yet very effective extruder is the brainchild of some members of the QR's community (in no particular order: Shauki B. / Mauro Manco (Exilaus) / Dale Dunn / Darkberg Aryavis (Flint Eastwood) and myself). I just tried to put it in a pleasant form. The name comes from the ring that looks like an aureola and it uses the flint wheel of a lighter. It was done initially for a NEMA17 and 1.75mm filament. The nice detail about this design is that it's almost self-locking on the filament and the forces applied on the stepper motor are cancelled by each others.This is an original design of an extruder that has the following features: Bill of Material: See it in action: Files for modification are publicly available and with a free Onshape account here: Successfully printed in PLA, ABS or PETG (2 shells and 20% infill is enough... But your milage may vary). For details about fitting the coil on the stepper motor, you can find them by looking for #bicgear, #saintflint or #flintfeeder on Google Plus. For fixing of the coil, the trickiest part of this build, having it only glued on the stepper shaft is not enough, it must be compressed axially, otherwise, it will "uncoil" and break on pushing or retracting the filament (depending on the direction of the filament vs the direction of the coil) and this will happen: Some alternatives were available (Clipper lighter with solid flint wheel and internal 5 mm diameter), but more recent models have smaller holes and drilling this stuff is REALLY hard (You need to get a drill made for ceramic or glass as shown in one of the picture. Better to be good quality if you intend to make several, otherwise you can cheap but it probably won't last 1 or 2). To secure it, the best is to tap the axle with an M3 thread and use wasted bicycle chain rolls as spacers (ask them to your local bike shop, they should give them for free) and stack them. Steps to tap the shaft of the stepper motor: Immobilize the axle with the tool used to secure the thread maker (which means you may need another one); Drill a hole 2.5 mm diameter 10 mm deep into the shaft; Form the thread with a 3 steps M3 forming tool, since the hole is blind (not going through) this is required; You can also put some strong Loctite or Super Glue to help secure the coil (watch out not to cover the curled part); You should be good to go... Hope it helps. Like I said, not your mother's extruder! But it worth every cent... 2015-09-03 Due to popular demand, I've just uploaded an MK8 edition. 2015-09-08 Adding the following postscript GCODE in your slicer will ease the change of material (will retract enough filament making it easy to empty the Bowden by hand). In my case 16 mm seems a good length for the E3DV6: G92 E0; zero the extruded length G1 F250 E-16; Retract filament from barrel G92 E0; zero the extruded length again Note: Add the reverse action at the beginning of a print to pull the correct length before starting. If you interrupt a print, remember that you won't have an empty extruder... 2015-09-13 Added Casino Chip Print (x4) and insert in the bearing place BEFORE putting the bearings and the axles in place. Center and glue to the external race of the bearing on each side. Help if the color has a good contrast with the body of the extruder. 2015-09-29 Corrected diameter of drilling for tapping the step motor The corrected diameter before forming the thread is 2.5 mm. 2 mm is possible (I did it), but it's way easier to go with 2.5 mm. Thanks Shauki B. for the note.2015-10-20 Added 3 mm version.2015-11-09 After some experiment, I wouldn't recommend the 3 mm version for the following reasons:For all the above reason, I think it's better to stick with Wade's or other derivatives that privilege a straight path... Sorry guy, I tried! (Note: I still enthusiastically recommend it for 1.75 mm. It's never let me down...)01-10-2016 Added MK7 version.

Saintflint Extruder
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Saintflint Extruder
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