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nzo

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Posts posted by nzo

  1. You did it SandervG & team! Well done and congratulations. I haven't dived in yet. Was so hot here in New Zealand I didn't sleep a wink.

    Ahhh...and the stress of waiting for first forum light...an agony and an ecstacy! LOL

     

    I love it so far. Very elegant and has a nice compactness.

  2. I've taken your comments on board - thank you Geert.

    I'm not sure what you mean about a big, thick stable base since this model doesn't have a base in the usual sense.

    With that amount of fine details and holes, I would print it slow and as cool as possible. This will also reduce curling up of edges. Maybe 190°C at 25mm/s, if your PLA can handle that? Maybe you could cut out a small part and try that first, and then manually adjust temp, to find the best settings? Also, be sure to have a big thick stable base, otherwise it will be knocked over.

  3. When I search the forum with UM2+ as one of the keyword targets, the results are usually mean and lean. But there are many results for UM2. Can I assume that UM2 and UM2+ are self-similar? For example: belt tensioning.

    I don't yet have any concerns about my UM2+ belt tensions but would like to know how to tighten them successfully. Is there a product-specific link where I can find this info?

    Thanks.

  4. This has been buzzing around in my head. So many suppliers of PLA (et al) don't have a clue what's in their product. Especially if they farm out their filament requirements and product responsibility to China.

    They talk as if they know, but they don't. It's all sales pitch and sell sell.

    I imagine Ultimaker do their filament research, but do you actually know what's in the filament you sell? In this case I'm referring to PLA - the poorer person's filament.

    • Like 1
  5. This is the reply I received from Krylon:

     

    I don't know of anything specific that would work for that application.  You could test the Preserve It Digital Photo and Paper Protectant in a small area:  

    http://www.krylon.com/products/preserve-it-digital-photo-paper-protectant/

    On that note, they say "test it" for all the spray products they sell. But I have to buy it to test it. Not exactly a winning strategy. I suggested to them that their product development team test it. PLA is not hard to source.

  6. I take it you are trying to coat your prints without paint or primer....just  raw plastic...

    Hi kman - yes, the simplest and fastest way for me at the moment is just spraying or painting a protective coating directly on the print. I had assumed the art-shop brands such as Crystal Kote were polyurethane. All the spray cans I have don't tell you what's in them!

    I've emailed Crystal Kote and Krylon to ask them about this. I'll let you know what they say. I haven't tried any model clear coats or paints.

    Currently I have a small stock of Wanhao filaments in different colors and one roll of Ultimaker Silver that came with the UM2+. I would buy more Ultimaker filament but it's 3 times more expensive than Wanhao in NZ, plus 15% gst plus freight.

    What benefits one gets with expensive Ultimaker PLA over the other brands is so far unknown to me. Have a look if you like at www.mindkits.co.nz (who mostly sell ultimaker stuff).

    I often feel Ultimaker are shooting themselves in the foot by using the filament pricing strategy they do. Filaments are the lifeblood of 3D printing.

  7. Hi Ultimaker materials whizz-kids,

    My experiments with Krylon, CrystalKote etc have all resulted in a PLA-reactive white patina (like fog on a window) on parts of the print which spoils the PLA color.

    I would love it if a non-reactive spray/paint product could be developed that would extend PLA's life and protect against moisture resorbtion. Example: an Ultimaker robot or Thingiverse truck left in an outdoor sandpit.

    One thing I have not tried yet is coating the print with diluted beeswax. However, Monsanto are doing a pretty good job in eradicating bee colonies with their neocotinoid inecticides.

    I've searched throughout New Zealand and there is nothing available.

    Thanks!

  8. Hi kman, and thank you for sacrificing some of your Christmas shopping and printing time :)

    • Spray. Thinly several times with in-between drying.
    • Cooled prints.
    • No humidity warnings or issues that i could see
    • I've been running a dehumidifier in the print room. Humidity hovers between 39% and 43%.
    • Haven't tried thinners yet
    • Filament has been kept dry in supplied ziplock packaging with some dessicant.
    • Yes, Wanhao filament. :angry:

    My noggin is officially full! :)

  9. I'm printing some front-end loaders for my US friend's grandkids, @ 70mm width, in various PLA colors. The original miniature model was created by agepbiz and posted on Thingiverse. I've resized it to 70mm in Cura 2.3.1 and have printed 4 of them.

    I created the supports in Meshmixer and scanned it for mesh defects, and also sent it to NetFabb for checking and used the resulting model in the UM2+.

    Printing mostly went well but every print has a scar on the linkage between the loader cabin and the front end. I've posted some pics here:

    loader-tractor-70mm-clear-pla.thumb.jpg.34e59ebc107e8b5867b97f4d9beb484b.jpg

    closeup-loader-pivot.jpg.8f4cafd18c40db353a3171dca4d066d3.jpg

    Thank you for any pointers!

    I guess I can heat-weld some filament in the scars.

    loader-tractor-70mm-clear-pla.thumb.jpg.34e59ebc107e8b5867b97f4d9beb484b.jpg

    closeup-loader-pivot.jpg.8f4cafd18c40db353a3171dca4d066d3.jpg

  10. Thanks for the excellent article link gr5! This "bad batch" problem seems to be widespread. About 7 out of 10 Wanhao spools I've used are 'snappy' brittle, although i've never had filament break in the bowden tube.

    May be time for Ultimaker to purchase - or hire time on - a scanning electron microscope for their materials expert...no? :)

    See what filament looks like at a deeper crystalline level.

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