Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.
Giant Nozzles and Watercooling - Slice Interview Formnext 2023
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 8 авг 2024
- THIS VIDEO WAS SPONSORED BY BONDTECH
Check out Slice Products Here (US "NBR" for 5% off): www.sliceengineering.com/?p=B...
My Store: nathansellsrobots.com
Patreon: / nathanbuildsrobots
Discord Channel: / discord
Podcast: www.perfectfirstlayer.com
This video description contains affiliate links. I may receive a commission through qualifying purchases made through these links.
0:00 intro
0:21 LGX Ace Printhead
1:52 Who needs Liquid Cooling?
2:44 What is Conduction Cooling?
3:25 Ceramic Heaters
4:38 Where are Parts Made
5:45 Gamma Master Nozzles
6:20 Large Diameter Nozzle
8:16 Outtro
I hate going to trade shows but I love learning about the new technology. Thank you for taking us to Formnext 2023 without all of the investment of our time and money, and without the hassles of traveling. These are great interviews and expositions of 3D printing technology.
Another great interview 👍
Your content never fails to impress me.
On another note, keep pumpin out the videos PLEASE bro.. im havin sucha hard time today.. my extruder driver went out on me last night so i cant print until my new motherboard comes in :(.. i just cant wait for my a1 mini to get here..
Keep it up! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Reason for classic heaters: full power across the temperature.
Reason for ptc ceramic heaters: typically higher initial power, decreasing power with temperature (safety).
So essentially if you are going above 350c, use a standard heater cartridge. If you stay below that, ceramic heater, its much safer to use. It cant melt your heater block in case of a thermal runaway, because firmware based protection can only protect from thermistor based failures, but if the hotend mosfet fails closed, nothing can protect you other than cutting power from the Mainboard.
It's obvius that Slice Engineering (SE) copied Simon's VzBot conduction heat break (2:44) and he's plate / adapter. What a shape! If you remember the guys from SE were accusing Simon for copying their "patent". Very laughable
I've heard about the Mosquito Conduct at least in early 2022 (probably as prototype), while the Goliath came out in late 2022 (and the short version without heatsink came out even later)
It's absurd what scumbags Slice are
Not to get too much into a history lesson here, but according to Slice the conduct hotend has been available to its OEM partners since 2020.
There are plenty of hotend options on the market, so I guess pick the one you like?
With bigger nozzles it is stronger on the perpendicular/side of the part but weaker layer to layer adhesion. CNC kitchen did a video.
I got a fever, and the only cure.... is... more Boron Nitride Paste!
I'd love to put 2.4 nozzles on my Ender 5 Plus and Ender 3 V3 SE. I mostly print props, armour and helmets but also want to be able to produce architectural molding. What do I have to do to get those big fat lines?😊
Peyton always dresses for the occasion
Did you have a chance to visit the Markforged booth?
Wow slice wanted to go after goliath and then copyd goliaths watercooling
Regarding liquid cooling, why not employ active cooling such as ThermoElectric cooling instead. You are cooling at the same time adding to the enclosure heat. Just some 💭
I've considered this, it probably comes down to the weight and complexity of a peltier cooler compared to the amount of cooling it provides.
Also, as Peyton mentioned, some machines already have water cooling systems built into them, particularly the industrial type of machines, so the water cooling block is just a drop-in for them.
@@NathanBuildsRobots Sincerely appreciate the clarification. Definitely driven by the economics and the retrofit aspects. Also the TE coolers don't handle vibrations that well(since it is low temp bonding of 1000's of bi-metal junctions), apart from the upper limit of operating temp. TE's are not that efficient, with reduced differential between cold and hot sides. The high temp versions are fairly expensive as well. Also they demand much more power relative to the cooling they provide(no wonder compressor driven cooling is still the norm for efficient cooling).
Because it's generally a requirement to use twice as much power to cool a TEC than you can dissipate, with lower efficiencies as temps increase. So you're adding a lot of power requirements, and then you need to cool the TEC, which puts you right back to where you started, but with more heat. There's a reason very few things use them, and a lot of the things that use them are things like bench instruments and small scale test cells.
@@Mr424242424242424242 But in this specific application, the heat output would reduce demand on the heated enclosure!, while still providing the lower amount of cooling needed past the heat break🤔. So, it is just a matter of economy while taking advantage of existing water cooling.
Is it me or do a lot of the companies sales reps look like they partied all night and are all licking their lips a lot ? Lol I could be wrong but I a few of them seem to lick their lips a lot.. 😂
Formnext turns into a beer garden from 4PM-midnight.
@NathanBuildsRobots well that explains a lot. Looks like a fun time for sure. Hope you had fun
Fk slice, Vzbot FTW