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June Puzzler!

Comments

17 comments

  • Artemio Mendoza

    In my experience, changes like that could be produced either by modifying the infill % or the layer. 

    However, the difference is too dramatic, that I would go with infill = 0%, so the vase was printed as a shell. 

    Cheers!

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  • Darrel Barnette

    I'll go with extrusion thickness.  You made it thicker.

    Darrel :)

     

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  • Darrel Barnette

    I'll go with extrusion thickness.  You made it thicker.

    Darrel :)


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  • Patrick Ferrell

    The relative clarity makes me think they're using Taulman's t-glase and single-wall print (helical).  The optical clarity of t-glase can be affected by the layer height and cross-section of the layer.  Not exactly sure how the sectional geometry (shape) of the layers change with any single parameter, but maybe this effect is simply from an increase in layer height.

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  • Patrick Ferrell

    I guess Darrel types faster than I do.  Brevity was never my strength!

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  • Darrel Barnette

    I guess I should sharpen my answer to say it was the extrusion multiplier that was the single setting that was changed.

    D-

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  • Patrick Ferrell

    The multiplier does seem to make more sense than just layer height.

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  • Darrel Barnette

    Although Patrick, you make a good point.  In the photo, each clear layer line also looks taller than the corresponding opaque layer lines.

    D-

     

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  • Patrick Ferrell

    Your eyes are better than mine - I can't be sure of that from the photo.  We need to make Samantha post ultra-high resolution photos including measurement reticles with for these contests.  But that might take too much fun out of the guesswork.

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  • Brad Bourgoyne

    My guess would be temperature. Increasing the temperature of the extruder will make the plastic more translucent.

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  • sergio diaz

    bed temp not on or too low bad pic quality my ref is the pic on the left

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  • Samantha Snabes

    Patrick and Sergio- apologies for the amateur low res photo:) I actually snapped the shot on my iPhone while visiting a customer in Louisiana who showed the prints to Matthew & I. We've noticed that varying temperature can have an impact on print sheen and opacity, although this is pretty dramatic!

    Brad, you're our winner for this month- so nice to see you online!. Let us know if you would like an intro to your neighbor and if you prefer natural, black, white, or yellow PLA:)

    We'll be featuring the customer we borrowed the monthly puzzler from on a future #madeinamerica blog at re3d.org/news- can't wait share it with you all!

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  • Patrick Ferrell

    Samantha, so that was with natural PLA?  Wow - I've never seen that much change with temperature on PLA.

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  • Samantha Snabes

    Yep, it was natural. I've started an experiment my Gigabot at home to try to replicate the finding and will post what I learn to this thread!

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  • sergio diaz

     

    well I didn't know which pic was the question I ran a file with no bed temp it looks like pic on the right falling apart bad fusion part on left looks fine most of my 3d parts  come out that way especially with thin walls this was just a wild guess I have a brand new msi 980 ti 6gig  gpu  intel i7 6700k cpu, asus z170 delux  moboard 1600 watt pws and we could not make out anything wrong with the part on the left hmm

     

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  • Brad Bourgoyne

    Hi Samantha,
    Natural PLA will be great. Natural works best for burning out in lost wax casting. I'll have to post some photos of recent work when I get a chance.

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  • Shawn Fitzpatrick

    That's pretty wild for Natural PLA. I assumed it was t-glase originally.

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