I’ve been doing 3d printing with PLA/PETG/ABS for about 10 years and I’m looking to try resin. I’m not all that familiar with the workflow besides knowing it’s UV cured. Is all curing done in the same machine? What are the reputable brands? What kind of build volumes are available?

  • MicrosoftSam@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The process is generally: Slice Print with resin printer Clean in ipa bath to remove excess resin Air dry Cure in a uv enclosure

    My knowledge is limited but from my experience Formlabs printers are high quality and as close to plug and print as you’ll get. The proprietary slicer is very good but also somewhat limited. Also Formlabs printers are expensive.

    I’ve also used an Elegoo Saturn 2. There’s a lot of hassle involved but the printer and resin are much cheaper and you have a lot more freedom with materials, slicers, customization, etc.

    • Kale@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      I’ve used formlabs printers at work. They are great, but using them has persuaded me to not purchase my own. Most prints, I use three pair of disposable gloves. That resin and the IPA wash (which has a lot of dissolved resin) make really annoying messes. We’ve already lost one Form Wash due to people being careless and leaving the lid up. The IPA with resin will set over time.

      You can’t pour the stuff down the drain. One user tried putting really contaminated IPA in a tray and sticking it in our chemical hood to dissolve (while myself or the lab manager wasn’t there to stop him). We had a surprise safety audit like we do on occasion and were cited for leaving this huge batch of flammable material out in the open.

      We ended up getting a dedicated flammable cabinet for resin IPA. At the end of the week, I’ll turn on the Form Wash and let it stir the wash IPA for a few minutes. While it’s still stirring, I transfer it to a couple of three liter jugs and place them in the flammables cabinet. It sits for a couple of days and a lot of solids settle to the bottom of the container. Then the top 80%-90% of the IPA is carefully poured back into the wash chamber without stirring up sediment on the bottom. Fresh IPA is used to top off the wash. The cloudy wash in the bottom of the jug is poured into yet another jug. Once that jug is full, it sits for a week to settle in the flammables cabinet. We can usually capture the top 10% and pour it (through a filter) back into our main wash solution, the rest is capped and left exposed to light for several days/weeks to set, and then is disposed of in our hazardous waste.

      Even with all of this settling to keep our wash solution as clean as we can, eventually, it will become too contaminated to use (formlabs recommends changing the liquid at a particular density).

      It’s a messy process and people still get gloves damp and touch the cure station and get resin prints everywhere. We leave IPA wipes on the counter and go though a pack of those every two weeks trying to keep the resin print area clean. I like the print quality and ease of getting a print. But after using the one at work, I decided not to get one at home.

  • j4k3@lemmy.worldM
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    1 year ago

    The only open source option is the Prusa, and it is pricey. All of the other options are proprietary and most are trying to bait customers into subscription services. Most also require cloud network access. This will never really change as far as the community software support. The issue is the display drivers for almost all high definition display technology is proprietary. Most hardware is unique in its implementation and API, so reverse engineering is only valid for one revision of one device. The data is hard to decode too. Anyone with a lab capable of reverse engineering is unlikely to have the time and motivation for such a limited return.

    I’m not saying you shouldn’t buy one. This is just something to be aware of going in.

    Generally, the resin is cured partially on the build plate, then the part is removed and washed, and finally the part is cured with a UV lamp or station.

  • ROLLER@twit.social
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    1 year ago

    @charmed_electron printer type and size depends on what you want. Consider the software to use on it, printers may only like some slices. I’ve found FDM and Resin printers to be complimentary. I’d agree with person about getting a suitable space. I use my loft, getting a place away from you main living space is needed. Temperature is an issue but settings can account for some of this.
    I think of my FDM printer as mechanical tool to build things. My resin printer feels more like cooking!