LGX Shortcut Mosquito Printhead
Price:
$248.00
Only 12 left in stock (can be backordered)
Master All Materials * Excel With Flexibles
The LGX Shortcut Mosquito Printhead is a special unit that includes the LGX Large Gears eXtruder and the LGX Shortcut short filament path hotend based on Copperhead, that will master all materials and excel with the soft and flexible.
Its main feature is a 23mm shorter filament path than the standard Mosquito.
Looking for the LGX Shortcut Mosquito Hotend?
Click here.
This LGX Print Head only supports 1.75 mm size filament.
Always check below if we have Product Alerts you should be aware of before buying.
You may need
Product Includes:
Designed To Be Flexible
The LGX Shortcut Mosquito Hotend includes a reversible heat sink that can be installed on the left or right hand side of the cold block. The heat sink also includes the hole pattern for attaching 40×40 fans.
Cooling down the heat break
Our tests suggest a 4010 fan is enough to cool down the cold block and the cold zone of the heat break, even with such small contact surface to the heat sink.
In case you have an application where additional cooling is required, try using a 4020 fan or 2 LGX heat sinks, one on each side.
Main Advantages
- Gives access to all available materials.
- Enables to print flexible and soft materials faster.
- It is small and light.
- Allows mounting in many different ways.
Compatible nozzles
The hot block included in this product is compatible with the RepRap standard of nozzles. Below is a list of compatible versions.
Click each link to open the related product page.
- From Bondtech
- From Slice Engineering
Freight Weight | 417 g |
---|---|
Dimensions | 14 × 8 × 11 cm |
Technical Specification
LGX extruder
- e-steps value : 400 using 16 microsteps; 800 using 32 microsteps.
- Drive wheels : hardened steel;
- Materials compatibility : abrasive; rigid; semi-flexible; flexible; and soft.
- Mounting holes : M3
- Mounting patterns : bottom anterior (2 points); left (2 points), right (2 points), front (4 points), back (4 points)
- Holes on the sides of the LGX™ : 5 mm depth
- Holes on the bottom of the LGX™ : 12 mm depth
- Max tightening torque on the extruder screws is 0.3 Nm
Using a plate between the extruder and the stepper motor
- Max thickness : 2.6 mm
- Optimal Thickness : between 0.3 and 2.3 mm;
Optimal Thickness allows full teeth engagement between the motor gear and the main double gear.
For Klipper users
rotation_distance = full_steps_per_rotation * microsteps / steps_per_mmrotation_distance = 200 * 16 / 400
rotation_distance = 8The above calculation assumes the following parameters:
- stepper motor is a 1.8 degrees motor hence 200 as full steps per rotation;
- microsteps are set to 16;
- e-steps value recommended for the LGX is 400.
Although we recommend to use the rotation_distance instead of the gear_ratio, we inform the LGX gearing ratio is 44:14, 37:17.
- To use the LGX directly attached to the hotends listed below,
PTFE tube lengths should be:- Old Mosquito/Mosquito Magnum : 10 mm
- New Mosquito/Mosquito Magnum : 11 mm
- Copperhead screw mount : 30 mm
- PTFE tube should be cut straight on both ends.
- Slight chamfer inside is recommended, but not mandatory.
- retraction speed : 35 mm/s
- retraction distance (bowden) : ~5 mm (0.4 + tube length[mm] x 0.015)
- retraction distance (direct drive) for rigid materials : 0.4 mm
- retraction distance (direct drive) for soft materials : 3 mm
- Max Environment operating temperature : 70°C
- Max stepper motor running temperature (using LGX) : 80℃
- Recommended stepper motor Current (using LGX) : 0.45 to 0.60 A (RMS)
- LGX™ DD net weight : 218.6 g
- LGX™ B net weight : 224 g
- Package measurements : 80x103x73 mm
- Package weight : 269 g
- Download the LGX Technical Drawings here.
Custom Stepper Motor for Bondtech LGX™
- Requires cable with PHR-6 connector
- 2 phases
- DC 3.1 V
- Max 0.7A / phase
To use the LGX®, run the stepper motor with currents between ~0.45 and ~0.65A:
Be vigilant regarding the stepper motor surface temperature.
Keep it cool enough to touch. Lower Vref otherwise. - Class H motor, rated up to 180°C
- Max recommended environment : 70°C
- Max temperature at this environment temperature can go up to 130°C on account of the self heating.
- Download the stepper motor Technical Data Sheet here.
How to change the Current using Vref
It is very hard to read the current being fed to stepper motors. To determine that current we rely on the Vref value. The Vref value is a voltage reference measured in VDC that can be read using a multimeter. It helps us setting the current output of the stepper motor driver.
Different 3D printer mainboards use different stepper motor drivers. Each type of stepper motor drivers has its own formula to calculate the required Vref to get a specific current. Here are some examples:
- TMC stepper drivers.
The formula for these drivers is Vref = ( I * 2.5 ) / Imax
Where I is the target current value measured in A; and Imax is 1.77 on regular mode and 1.2 on SilentStepSticks mode. - Pololu A4998.
The formula for these drivers is Vref = I * 8 * R
Where I is the target current value measured in A; and R is the Sense Resistor value, that depends on what board are you using. Melzis use 0.1. The Creality Silent boards use 0.15, ...LGX Shortcut Mosquito Hotend
- Cold Block Material : Anodized Aluminum;
- Heat Sink Material : Anodized Aluminum;
- Mosquito Hot Block materials : steel tube; copper body; nickel plating.
- Max operating (nozzle) temperature : 450°C
- Max tightening torque on the extruder screws is 0.3 Nm
- Max tightening torque on the heatsink/cold block screw is 0.6 Nm
- Cooling fan mounting : 2 holes, M3 thru-all 10mm
- LGX Shortcut Mosquito hotend net weight : 61 g
- Package measurements : 80x103x73 mm
- Package weight : 105 g
Addressing A Hot Stepper Motor
To use the LGX®, LGX® Lite or LGX® Lite Mirrored, run the stepper motor with currents between ~0.45 and ~0.65A.
This current interval is just a recommendation and it should be optimal to keep the stepper motor running with enough torque and low enough surface temperature.
Be vigilant regarding the stepper motor surface temperature.
Keep it cool enough to touch. Lower the current otherwise.
If the stepper motor is cool and loosing steps you need more torque.
In this case increase the current.
To adjust the LGX's stepper motor current use one of the following methods:
It is very hard to read the current being fed to stepper motors. To determine that current we rely on the Vref value. The Vref value is a voltage reference measured in VDC that can be read using a multimeter. It helps us setting the current output of the stepper motor driver.
Different 3D printer mainboards use different stepper motor drivers. Each type of stepper motor drivers has its own formula to calculate the required Vref to get a specific current.
You can learn how to adjust the Vref by watching the video or by following this guide as example:
Lowering current on Ender-6
If your printer doesn't have DigiPOTs, and in case you don't have a multimeter to visualize the Vref you may still adjust the current fed to the LGX stepper motor by trial and error.
Use the analog potentiometer (inside yellow ring)next to the extruder's stepper motor driver (below the heatsink inside the red ring), and turn the potentiometer a few degrees at a time.
Rotate it counter clockwise to lower the current, or clockwise to increase it.
Between each iteration, use the printer and check if the stepper motor is not getting hot neither it is loosing steps.
Lower current if stepper motor is too hot to touch.
Increase current if stepper motor is loosing steps.
DigiPOTs are digital potentiometers which resistance can be varied by digital communication instead of turning a knob, like seen above.
On a 3D printer with a mainboard carrying DigiPOTs, you may use the user interface of the unit (if that feature is available) or even Gcode commands to set the current of the different stepper motors.
On RepRap units with DigiPOTs, the M906 command may be used to change the Extruder stepper motor current M906 Ennn, where nnn is the amount of milliamps desired.
Marlin also uses a similar command. M906 Ennn sets the current on TMC drivers. On stepper motors with other drivers and DigiPOTs, you may also set the current in milliamps using the command M907 Ennn
Video Guides
Coming soon.
Product Videos
Coming soon.
STEP Files To Download
Click the links below to download STEP files with simplified geometries of each available setup.
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