kmanstudios 1,120
Afterwards, at what temp does it become soft again?
1 minute ago, kmanstudios said:Afterwards, at what temp does it become soft again?
You should eat up the surface around 60/80 degree to start to sculp it
I am sorry, I meant after you sculpt it, you said it gets hard. Does it get soft again or does it bake in the details....sorta like annealing it?
Just now, kmanstudios said:I am sorry, I meant after you sculpt it, you said it gets hard. Does it get soft again or does it bake in the details....sorta like annealing it?
it will always melt around the same temperature but when you heat the surface the first time and you smooth it dipping your finger in some cold water and smoothing the surface and you let it cool down it will feel in a different way
Thanks for the clarification ?
Just now, kmanstudios said:Thanks for the clarification ?
No problem ?
Hi I just bought some Thibra 3D Skulpt and am struggling to find out what the density of this material is as I am trying to set up a profile for it in cura so I know ruffly how much I need for my project.
6 hours ago, twolaura said:Hi I just bought some Thibra 3D Skulpt and am struggling to find out what the density of this material is
Well, the manufacturer shows it on the product page in red and provides a technical data sheet that is offered in the download section...
I would say: it's not that hard to find... (1.26g/cc - determined according to ISO 1183)
Edit: ok, it's probably not the manufacturer, but one of the first results on google... ?
Thibra3D datasheet: http://www.thibra3d.com/media/wysiwyg/producten/datasheet_thibra3D.pdf
Edited by tinkergnomeThank you so much knew it might just be right in front of me ?
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fntsmn 3
After you heat up the surface and let it could down it will become really hard and of course the layers bounding is great. If you want to avoid that it will change shape I will lock it using a thin layer of Epoxy resin.
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