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    Dudes about thermal paste....

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    • dragonnundefined
      dragonn @droftarts
      last edited by

      @droftarts said in Dudes about thermal paste....:

      I would imagine that computer thermal paste is not up to the task. Arctic Silver 5 http://www.arcticsilver.com/as5.htm is one of the best, and it's temperature limits are:
      Extended Temperature Limits:
      Peak: –50°C to >180°C
      Long-Term: –50°C to 130°C
      It'll be breaking down, possibly burning, maybe leaking.

      Ian

      It is up to the task, because you only apply thermal paste on the cold side of the heat break and this side never reaches over ~80C

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      • fmaundefined
        fma
        last edited by fma

        Thermal paste is a very bad heat conductor: aluminium is 240 W·m⁻¹·K⁻¹, good thermal paste is... 3 W·m⁻¹·K⁻¹!!! 2 orders of magnitude less!

        It should only be used to fill tiny little air gaps, remaining after polishing surfaces. On processors, the best way is to have very flat/polished surfaces, and apply strong pressure. Thermal paste should be put in a very thin layer.

        I often see people putting way too much paste, reducing the heat conductivity instead of improving it! I never put thermal paste or grease in any hotend, and never had any jam issues.

        Frédéric

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        • sebkritikelundefined
          sebkritikel
          last edited by

          I use (and Slice Engineering recomends) Boron Nitride paste with the Mosquito Hotend; I have personally applied it to the thermistor and heater cartridges, although they have some additional application insight listed on their website:

          Slice Engineering™ recommends Boron Nitride Paste for use in hotends of any brand. For
          decades it has been used as a “heat transfer and release coating” for industrial cartridge
          heaters. Use it to improve heat transfer:
              ● From the cartridge heater to the hot block, to extend the life of the cartridge heater
              ● From the hot block to the temperature sensor, to shorten response time and improve
                 accuracy of temperature measurements
              ● From the hot block to the heat break to improve high flow rate performance when
                 printing with large diameter nozzles
              ● To improve the seal between nozzle and heat break
          
          Boron Nitride Paste may be used generally, in assemblies operating in temperatures up to
          1000°C, as an electrically insulative heat transfer and anti-seize compound.
          

          Listed thermal conductivity of 31.4 W/mK

          Large(ish?) IDEX - 6HC, 1HCL
          Stratasys Dimension 1200es to 6HC Conversion

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          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators
            last edited by

            Boron nitride (hexagonal) is good stuff, I used to make waveguide CO2 lasers out of it. Few other materials have such good thermal conductivity yet are electrical insulators.

            Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
            Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
            http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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            • grizewaldundefined
              grizewald
              last edited by

              Agreed on the utility of boron nitride paste. I also use it on the threads of the nozzle in my Mosquito hot end and it ensures that removing the nozzle is pain free every time.

              I can't quantify it, but it feels like it has also made steel nozzles a little less reluctant to getting up to temperature and staying there.

              The only thing to watch out for is if there's any excess at the ends of the holes for the heater cartridge and temperature sensor, it tends to fall off and get incorporated into whatever you're printing at the time!

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              • Quadcellsundefined
                Quadcells
                last edited by

                Can Boron Nitride Thermal Paste be used on the heat break of the E3D Chimera + hotends?
                Is it better to use the the grease they supply. Would anyone know the thermal conductivity of the E3D grease?

                /quadcells

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                • PaulHewundefined
                  PaulHew
                  last edited by

                  I use Arctic on my heat breaks.
                  Slice recommend Nitride, but speaking to a dealer he use Arctic also.

                  HTH Paul

                  RailCore II - Duet Mini + 1LC, Voron V0.1 - Duet Mini
                  Voron 2.4 disassembled..... Waiting for the RailCore Mini....

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                  • Quadcellsundefined
                    Quadcells @PaulHew
                    last edited by

                    @PaulHew Articsilver 5 on the Chimera?

                    /quadcells

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                    • Quadcellsundefined
                      Quadcells @PaulHew
                      last edited by

                      @PaulHew asking because I have Articsilver 5, HY410 and Boron Nitride Thermal Paste , but no E3D thermal grease.

                      /quadcells

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                      • PaulHewundefined
                        PaulHew
                        last edited by

                        E3D sell the same stuff for all of their hotends, AFAIK.
                        I am using Arctic MX-4 compound

                        RailCore II - Duet Mini + 1LC, Voron V0.1 - Duet Mini
                        Voron 2.4 disassembled..... Waiting for the RailCore Mini....

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                        • A Former User?
                          A Former User
                          last edited by

                          I used galium based "liquid metal" for computers as core of the heatsink is copper but trying them out on the 3d printers with aluminium parts is a bad idea... no I heard that mosquito comes with plated copper and steel parts so no aluminium there, also I know there are copper heater blocks for e3d and non copper / brass nozzles so it might work there too .. anyhow, if there's aluminium the LM compounds are dangerous, if it's copper they are best conductors compared to everything I ever tried (have not tested Boron Nitride)

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