There is this video from CNC Kitchen on printing flexibles:
https://youtu.be/4InFd5DoZa4I didn't know ABS was toxic. Does a typical soldering iron air cleaner work or does the ABS need to be vented outside?
The extruder wasn't loose, it was the heater that goes into the block.
Attached is the spacing in the extruder before I changed the height.
ABS isn't toxic. Or rather - it is not toxic in the sense that you would keel over if you print it.
It is not healthy though - heated ABS releases styrene, fine particles and few other things being released while printing (anyone who ever printed ABS will recognize the smell) - could cause asthma over time and similar issues. Most 3D printing filaments release similar fumes and particulates to some degree - even PETG, PLA or Nylon.
So you will want to ventilate the room and ideally don't have it next to you when it is printing. But unless you are running a printing farm blasting out ABS parts 24/7 in a warehouse somewhere, you don't need to worry too much about ABS. The resins used by resin printers are waaay worse for your health than any ABS emissions you can get.
However, do protect the machine itself from drafts! Certainly don't run a fan/forced ventilation there - that will cause air currents around the print, uneven cooling which makes the plastic warp and you get lifted corners, delaminated layers (with loud cracks as the part cools), etc, especially if you are don't have an enclosed machine.
If you operate the printer in an enclosure then that will pretty much keep the particulates and any styrene emissions from ABS printing down as well.