Believe it or not, but this is my first delta 3D printer that I’ve ever used and this is also why I was really excited to get my hand on the FLSUN Q5. A delta printer is mainly different from a classic, cartesian 3D printer due to the way it moves the printhead. In order to move the nozzle to a specific location even only on one axis, all 3 stepper motors need to move the vertical slides in a coordinated manner. This does look very mesmerizing and allows you to move the printhead very quickly, though comes with added computational effort and, in the past often difficult calibration.
Read MoreFor ages, I’ve been looking for the holy grail of 3D printing, and this is for me, getting 3D prints with a strength similar to injection molded parts. 3D printed materials can be really strong, but most of them show only 50% or less strength if they are loaded perpendicular to the layers. In the past, I tried a couple of methods to improve layer adhesion or fuse the layers together post-printing. Even though some helped a little, none of them showed a significant difference. A couple of tests involved annealing the parts, simply in an oven, submerged in sand or even ABS, internally reinforced with polycarbonate. Annealing usually involves dimensional changes of the parts from either sagging because the prints become soft or the reduction of internal stresses or crystallization. In the comments under one particular video, viewers wanted me to anneal my parts in plaster to minimize warping and even using the closed cast as a mold in which I can re-melt the printed part and fuse the layers together. So this is what I’ve finally been working on
Read MoreOf course this is a marketing campaign by Polymaker, though I haven’t been paid for this video and will even participate on my own. Our task is to design the strongest hook with some design restrictions, print three of them in Polymakers PolyMax PLA, and send them to Polymaker until September 25th 2020, who will be then testing them against each other to find a winner. The requirement to print the parts in precisely their material has a strange aftertaste for a competition. Still, I can understand it in a way so that everyone uses the same material and doesn’t have an advantage by using some fancy carbon fiber reinforced filament or whatever. Well, and it’s good for sales… If you don’t have any Polymax PLA or don’t want to buy some or maybe even don’t have a 3D printer, stay until the end of the video where I’ll tell you about a way you could still enter the competition.
Read MoreRegular PLA is really easy to print and stronger than some might expect, though if a PLA part actually fails, it shatters quite violently. During the last years, many companies brought modified PLA filaments onto the market that claim to improve on the downsides, up to the point that some even call their modified PLA “Eco ABS”. Have you ever used a modified PLA and how was your experience? Let’s discuss down in the comments! There is not one PLA Plus or Tough PLA, so I can’t compare all of them, but I received a roll of Polymakers PolyLite PLA, which I call a regular “PLA” and a roll of their “PolyMax PLA” with is the modified version which I’ll use to represent PLA Plus. I thought this is a great opportunity to finally compare the two materials. The results will not match 100% with any other brand, but we’ll see really clear trends.
Read MoreSo filaments made from PC /ABS, which is a blend of the two materials, is something that is quite common and helps combine different properties of those materials for specific needs. I have been using PC/ABS or other PC blends in the past, and even though they show good overall properties, layer adhesion in particular is still something they are usually not great at. When I first read the articles about this new type of filament, I wasn’t sure how this star-shaped pattern inside of the filament should help with mechanical properties. The paper they wrote about this method explained it better, though. The general idea is, that you heat treat your parts over the glass transition temperature but below the melting point, after printing which, supposedly fuses the layers together. Unfortunately, if you usually put prints into an oven and heat them over their glass transition temperature, which is important that the healing process works, they severely deform and make them not properly usable anymore. The idea behind the dual material filament is that the flow of the material through the 3D printer nozzle is laminar, so your print, that looks from the outside like ABS, is reinforced internally via a continuous polycarbonate core. This is important for the heat treatment step. ABS has a glass transition temperature of around 100°C and PC significantly higher at around 140°C. In order to minimize deformation, the heat treatment temperature with this material is above the glass transition temperature of ABS but below the one of PC. This way the polycarbonate stays strong and reinforces the ABS and minimizes deformation during the process. The long exposure to heat, in the paper, they treated parts for 3 to 7 days, supposedly fuses the ABS layers, giving it superior strength, especially in-between the layers. Sounds like a plausible idea to me and worth trying out. PC and ABS are a good combination of materials for such a task, because they are mixable and work and can fuse together. Not every material combination does work due to things like polarity and you might have experienced that in the past, when you, for example, changed materials from Nylon to PLA and noticed that the first layers don’t stick together anymore until enough material got purged.
Read MoreWell, it finally happened, and I bought myself a Mini Lathe after desiring one for years. You ask why? Well, that’s also what my wife asked. As This Old Tony once said, you always need one more milling machine, and I think that also applies to lathes. Well, I regularly have projects in mind like for example special nozzles for the Filastruder that would require such a tool. I desired having a lathe at my disposal because this is, in my opinion, one of the most honest ways to machine metal. It’s such a pleasure to dive your tool into the material, adjust the pressure with your hand and just feel the metal being peeled off. Probably also one of the reasons why I’m currently not planning to convert it to CNC, or what do you think? I don’t have a lot of space and it had to go down into my basement, so a Mini Lathe, in my case the Sieg SC2 with a 450W motor and 400mm distance between the centers, was the machine of choice. I bought mine from a local vendor that also just imports them but I hoped for more quality control on their side. The lathe was around 1000€ delivered plus another 500€ for additional tools and accessories. You can get similar models cheaper, but this one at least came with all metal gears and a tailstock with a quick lock. Even though I didn’t do any real modifications, I still took it apart, cleaned all the ways put it back together and adjusted the gib strips. The only thing I really changed is adding a Multifix Tool Post, and that thing is a piece of beauty and worth every penny!
Read MoreThis is the Creality CR-6 SE that was launched for their 6th anniversary on Kickstarter and was a huge success with over $4 Million in pledges. I also received one of the beta units, just, when the Kickstarter ended and am honestly quite happy that I didn’t contribute to the hype there was around this new machine because Kickstarters can sometimes go way into the wrong direction. The reason why Creality chose Kickstarter probably wasn’t because they needed the funding, but they used this as a big marketing campaign, which did work out very well for them. You’ve probably already heard a lot about it from other sources but I’ll give you a bit more critical thoughts on it.
Read MoreConsidering the view count of my other two videos on threaded inserts, you seem to be really interested in that topic. Adding threads to your assemblies doesn’t only make then look better; it also increases their functionality by adding strength to the connection and adds a reliable ways to assemble and disassemble them. I got tons of questions and suggestions below the last videos and today I’ll be tackling a couple.
One of the easiest and most inexpensive solutions for adding metal threads to your prints is using regular nuts that you can embed in a couple of different ways in your prints. We’ll be testing a pocket on the side of a part in which we slide the nut and also a pocket below our print in which we firmly seat a nut. Keep in mind that this method can’t always be used if you don’t have access from the back and from the side. Also, in comparison to the other methods, it can sometimes be hard to get the proper fit. If the pocket is too small, installing the nuts can be difficult, if it’s too big, the nuts constantly fall out and drive you crazy. I’m sure you’ve also been at that point.
Read MoreI print a lot and this also means that many of my prints run overnight. Unfortunately, our bedroom is right next to my office in which my main printers usually are. When I got into 3D printing it was a real pain because the printing noises just kept me from some good night sleep so I usually only ran them during the day. A couple of years ago I started putting cheap pavers below my machines that you can get in many different sizes from the hardware store. You can see them in plenty of my videos and viewers keep asking, what they are and why I use them.
Read MoreDon’t judge me that I’m a little late to the game, especially with the Ender-3, though I just didn’t have luck with newly released printers in the past. Having troubles with a 3D printer right out of the box, especially if you’re new, can be really frustrating, so I chose two printers that have been on the market for a while and shouldn’t have these first batch problems anymore. The Ender-3 is probably the printer most talked about and probably also the most sold of 2019. I chose the Alfawise U30 Pro as a second contestant in the comparison because the price is similar but it seems to offer quite some features that the Ender-3 Pro doesn’t have but also lacks some. But how will they really compare in the end?
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