Details
I personally have the plus upgrade kit on one of my four Ultimaker printers so I am familiar with it. It includes these things that I listed from what I feel are most important to least important:
- Olsson block with 4 nozzle sizes.
- 35W Heater - needed when printing with high volume for exaple .6mm (and larger) and doing thick layers such as .3mm to .6mm thick.
- extruder that can be opened so that it's easy to slide the filament in and out by hand - this lets you know if your bowden is stuck and can even help you diagnose issues with your teflon part.
- 2X geared extruder for 2X more power.
- New higher temp teflon isolator
- Spring replacement wtih less pressure on isolator
- feeder with grooved bearing to fit filament more snugly - not sure what the purpose is for this - to hold the filament in the right spot?
- slightly shorter head to give you more Z space for taller prints (only a few mm).
- Smaller spool holder that only holds one spool
- New fan shroud that has the fans blowing down instead of tilted
- New clips to hold in glass that are less likely to make your fingers bleed
I'm selling 1,2,4,5. Note that the meduza-feeder-upgrade you have to partly print yourself - details
here
feature 3 is also found in the iroberti feeder which you can
print yourself
and you only need to buy about 2 screws (which come with my solution to #4, the meduza kit).
6 you can also
print yourself
9 you can print lots of different spool holders. Personally I put the filament on the floor.
10 you can also
print yourself
but I've been pretty happy with the fan shroud that comes with the um2.
11 - I just use pliers instead of my fingers when opening those clips
I included zero .4mm nozzles above because you get one with the kit
I included temp sensor (default qty 0) because they break easily when taking the old one out of a non-olsson block. So if you want to be safe and don't mind spending the extra money then get this also. This step is tricky for some people and they break the sensor but I've gotten many out without breaking (I use wd40, heat, a sewing needle, and patience).