






⚙️ Upgrade your 3D printing game with precision and power!
This upgraded aluminum MK8 Bowden extruder with a 40-tooth drive gear is a direct replacement for Creality Ender 3/5 and CR-10 series printers. Designed for enhanced durability and smoother filament feeding, it supports a wide range of materials including PLA, ABS, TPU, Wood, and PETG. The DIY kit includes clear instructions for quick installation, making it the go-to upgrade for professionals seeking reliable, high-performance 3D printing.







| ASIN | B07WKTVNCW |
| Best Sellers Rank | #48,031 in Industrial & Scientific ( See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific ) #57 in 3D Printer Extruders |
| Brand | Sovol |
| Color | Gray |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop, Personal Computer, Smartphone |
| Compatible Material | PLA, ABS, Wood, TPU, PTEG |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,064 Reviews |
| Enclosure Material | Aluminum |
| File Format | stl,obj,gcode |
| Manufacturer | Sovol |
| Material | Aluminum |
| Nozzle Primary Material | Aluminum |
| Nozzle Tip Material | Aluminum |
| Operating System | Windows, macOS, Linux |
| Supported File Format | stl,obj,gcode |
E**Y
This is the one to get
Like a lot of others, my Voxelab Aquila's stock plastic extruder arm cracked not long after I got my printer. I printed a replacement arm, and that actually got me by for about 4 months, but that arm started to wear out and was causing unreliable extrusion too. I didn't really feel like I needed to upgrade to a dual gear, or even a direct drive set up for my PLA and PETG printing, so I started looking into the aluminum stock replacements. I've heard these can have issues of their own; the spring can be too stiff, bad hardware, no instructions, and the pivot spacer can be too short which keeps the arm from moving. I'm happy to report, this kit has none of those problems. The stock spring is working fine, parts are all well made and fit great, no problems with the hardware and fittings. Instructions consist of an exploded view drawing with the parts labeled, which was enough for me. If you really run into trouble, there are a bunch of videos out there, or just look at your stock extruder, it goes together the same way. I'd suggest assembling the roller to the arm first, then putting everything else together with the spring being last. So all in all, this is a great kit. I'm surprised a kit of machined and anodized parts like this can be sold for such a low price to be honest. I feel like maybe aside from the brass extruder gear, the rest of these parts should last the life of the printer. If you are shopping for one of these, and seeing about 30 different versions that look the same, just get this one and be done with it.
R**I
Fits perfectly on my Ender 3 v2
Good product Works perfectly Sturdy construction
D**X
Perfect replacement for Ender 3 v2
Fixed my feeding issues on Ender 3 v2, I could tell I had issues when prints failed and had "dust" up around this extruder. Thought it was a clogged nozzle but kept happening after checking/cleaning nozzle. Finally replaced old one with this and next print was perfect!
D**.
New spring was too tight so I used the old one.
After weeks of tracking down my Ender 3 Pro issues to the extruder assembly, I figured I'd replace the whole thing since I wasn't sure what was wrong with it. The new all metal assembly went in fine and it mostly solved my issue, but the new spring had just a little bit too much tension and I was experiencing some skipping. I replaced the new spring with the old, original spring and that seems to have done the trick. Most people probably won't have to do this, but if you experience the same issue just use your old spring and hopefully that will fix it for you.
K**N
[Ender 3 Pro] Perfect replacement and better than ever!
Had the original plastic extruder and the arm portion snapped causing dashed lines on my prints, because the filament wasnt being pushed through properly. I didn't noticed the snapped arm at the time until I removed the extruder itself. The original brass toothed gear on the extruder stepper gear can be a challenge to remove. Eventually used a ligther to heat the brass to make the metal soft/expand, then used pliers to pop the gear off. I positioned one jaw of the pliers under the gear and the other jaw on top the stepper motor armature post (the post the gear is fitted on). Also made sure to keep the lighter's flame away from the stepper housing during the heating process. There might be a better way to remove the fitting, but these were the tools I had at the time. I can see using a demel to grind off the gear, but that might cause unwanted shavings in the stepper motor. If you still have the plastic version of the extruder, just upgrade to metal before you go insane from the troubleshooting causing a brain aneurysm. Extremely happy with this sturdy replacement and I can resume my printing!
A**R
Perfect fit
Works perfectly and now I can print using TFU.
T**Z
Great upgrade from stock!
So much better than the plastic that comes from factory, I got one of those “fancy” dual gear ones and it broke after a month, I have had this for well over a year and i have had no issues with it. The build quality is great and it fits perfect. Great upgrade!
C**E
TPU on an Ender 3!
I was looking for some knob handles for my poi, and unsure of the size, shape and weight, and realized it would $15 to buy most pairs I was looking at. They were all 3d printed TPU and I normally just do things myself but Ive got a fairly stock Ender 3 (other than the bullseye cooler) and been told it couldn't do TPU because of the Bowden. Well instead of spending $30 on a couple pairs of handles I decided I'd spend the same on this and a roll of TPU and figure it out anyway. Status quo be damned! I got the TPU first and tried to print it, but got nowhere. There was a gap between the extruder gear and the intake of the Bowden tube and the filament would just push out there and never actually be forced into the hot end. I couldn't even print a purge line. I got this today and installed it. Its pretty simple and similar the original so taking that one out should tell you how to put this in. I just printed my first TPU item and it came out flawless (although at 20mm/s but I decided to start conservative) Now that that works I plan on printing so many other things like endcaps for staffs, and grommets/seals and the like. I'd like to build a beetleweight combat robot and a lot of the armour is TPU. I feel like this opened up a whole new avenue for printing nonrigid items, and has expanded the life of my Ender for much longer as that was a reason i had though about updating. 6 years strong and its been a beast!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago