Makerbot Replicator+Which 3D printers are you folks using?
Ultimaker S5
Form Labs Form 2
Makerbot Replicator+Which 3D printers are you folks using?
I have an original MakerSelect v2(200mm x 200mm x 180mm) with minimal changes which I use primarily to print 3d printer parts and random prototypes.
I have a beastly Ender 5 plus which can print huge(350 x 350 x 400), but I haven't yet printed anything huge. It will eventually get dual extrusion and a 4 way splitter for 5 different filaments but right now it's doing the polycarbonate parts for printer #3.
And I have a middle child Ender 3(220 x 220 x 250) which is the one being stripped down and rebuilt as my high temp printer. It's getting a liquid cooled dual extrusion hotend, liquid cooled steppers, remote mount parts cooling, high temp belts, maybe high temp microswitches, new motherboard and power supply.
Unless you have a reasonably high end SLA printer, you are not likely to be happy with the result. If you have a semi-intact original, you are better off making a casting.For those of you who know more than I about 3D printing (pretty much all of you, I suspect), is there a way to 3D print an interior light lens for a car or an airplane? They always get brittle as the get old, and replacements are so often either (1) impossible to find, (2) incredibly expensive, or (3) so old they're almost as bad as the dissolved one they replace.
Ideas?
I do it because I worry about adhesion to the build plate.Am I the only weirdo that stare at 5-10 layers on at beginning of print?
It's surprisingly memorizing... like ocean waves crashing.
I do it because I worry about adhesion to the build plate.
Which 3D printers are you folks using?
Ultimakers have a heated glass build plate, hence no need for a raft.Lately, the raft have been sticking to the model; what temperate differences are people using between model and raft?
Do you guys do any hardness or any other kind of testing when the parts come out of the machine? Something like a RAM mount for a GPS on my Dual Sport motorcycle needs to be as strong as the original as it lives a rough life on the trail.
I don't have one yet... But when I do, it'll be a Prusa i3 Mk 3S. Stellar reviews, features that are friendly to people new to 3D printing, open source and available both as a finished product and as a built-it-yourself kit (at a $250 savings!).
It is also what is being used to print the aforementioned parts for my airplane.
Edit: I must admit that the Snapmaker 2.0 is also fairly tempting, mainly because it gives you the ability (at least in theory) to build one machine with the trifecta of maker tools: 3d printer, laser cutter, and CNC mill.
Edit: I must admit that the Snapmaker 2.0 is also fairly tempting, mainly because it gives you the ability (at least in theory) to build one machine with the trifecta of maker tools: 3d printer, laser cutter, and CNC mill.
Do you guys do any hardness or any other kind of testing when the parts come out of the machine? Something like a RAM mount for a GPS on my Dual Sport motorcycle needs to be as strong as the original as it lives a rough life on the trail.
I suspect that's one of those 'better in theory' things as the requirements for those 3 things vary widely. CNC wants heavy duty and often slow. 3d printing is in the middle and laser is usually fast but with a very light weight tool.