3D Printing extreme high layers

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 64

  • @SuperMakeSomething
    @SuperMakeSomething 3 года назад +13

    Very cool project! Impressive that the stock heater could handle heating that amount of filament continuously. Could you share your print speed settings?

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +2

      Yes, i wasn’t exspecting that, too. I‘ll send it to you and put it in the desc here tomorrow. Thanks.

    • @SuperMakeSomething
      @SuperMakeSomething 3 года назад +1

      @@hen3drik Awesome! Thank you!

  • @isekaistudio1581
    @isekaistudio1581 Год назад +7

    Bro straight up you're extremely creative not only through what you do in your videos but how you also edit as well man 🔥

  • @UltraNyan
    @UltraNyan 2 года назад +3

    Certified Tooth Paste Bency

  • @Mrpurple75
    @Mrpurple75 2 года назад +5

    Those overhangs, incredible

  • @FrankOWahl
    @FrankOWahl Год назад +2

    That benchy is so cursed. LOL

  • @LetsPrintYT
    @LetsPrintYT 3 года назад +1

    Never seen a 3mm nozzle before, good work 👍

  • @yagoa
    @yagoa 7 месяцев назад +1

    a new attempt with clone CHT would be really cool

  • @TheRealNici
    @TheRealNici 3 года назад +3

    How is adhesion like between the layers? Do they come apart more easily?

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +4

      I‘ts like nothing I had printed before. One massive block. The whole vase sound very different, too when snapped.

  • @BH4x0r
    @BH4x0r Год назад +1

    drill some holes in the side, get some brass wire to go through the holes, and use brazing solder for brass to solder them in, you'll need a blowtorch to braze those in, but they can easily withstand temps over 400C so for a printer its fine, unlike normal solder
    then tap the thread so its good again
    that'll increase the effective melting area and speed and you maybe can even do 4-5mm then and you wont need that restriction on the inside, you should then be able to go all the way through with that 3mm drill while it still melts properly :)
    basically a ghetto ultra large CHT nozzle

  • @Leviathan3DPrinting
    @Leviathan3DPrinting 2 года назад +1

    Man if I could give this video 2 likes I would. 100% going to be trying this is the near future albeit I will probably just buy a CHT 1.8 since they are available now.

  • @Bacender
    @Bacender 3 месяца назад

    Great video can you please increase the volume of the music next time

  • @alfredspijkerman
    @alfredspijkerman Год назад +1

    awesome. I am printing LARGE, I mean really large pieces (think about 3 meter sizes, printed in parts, must be functioanal and strong). Upgrading from 0.4 to 0.8 mm nozzle already helped to pump up my grams of filament that I can print in 1 hour. Currently print of FLV Sun 0.8 mm nozzle, 1.75 mm filament, 100 mm/s - 0.3 mm layer height and 0.9 mm wide layers, with very good quality and strong bonding. This turns out to about 75 gram/hour wich is the ral metric for me. I actually would like to go to 150 g.hour but quality and bond strength must remain excellent. Slight increased layer heigh to abot 0.4 or even 0.5 mm would not bother me. I am wondering if changing to 2.85 mm nozzle would do any good. In theory yes, nozzle is much bigger but is it possible to get everything warm enough and get all this filament through fast and nicely flowing and all. Love your work. If you have any suggestions or would like to do a video on how to pump up to 150 gram/hour with good quality that would be awesome.

  • @JohnnyForehead
    @JohnnyForehead 2 года назад +2

    I love it when people think outside the box. Very cool.

  • @samuraijaydee
    @samuraijaydee Год назад +1

    Brilliant work! I like the cooling shroud on your printer. I'm going to go see if you've a video on how you made it! Tus!

  • @SalveMonesvol
    @SalveMonesvol 2 года назад +1

    Dude, you should make another video with the 3mm nozzle. That thing is INSANE

  • @hasserecht3678
    @hasserecht3678 Год назад

    Nazzle... keine Ahnung warum Deutsche immer Videos in Englisch synchronisieren müssen.

  • @hikolanikola8775
    @hikolanikola8775 2 года назад +1

    why the hell is everyone going with higher layers and more plastic per sec...
    If you ask me i would rather go with 0,01mm layer height for best definition.

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  2 года назад +1

      Agree, I just do big layers for esthetics. Had to do this video because of the question what's possible.

  • @razielgrey5535
    @razielgrey5535 2 года назад +1

    Brilliant! This will save so much time. Thanks!

  • @ArtichokeAnarchy
    @ArtichokeAnarchy 10 месяцев назад

    when your printer nozzle go to prison

  • @AkibaLine
    @AkibaLine 3 года назад +2

    Really nice video! 👌

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +1

      I like your ‘21 channel trailer

  • @ioonerbe
    @ioonerbe 4 месяца назад

    Print like it's 2011 :D

  • @maxbiagi3091
    @maxbiagi3091 3 года назад +2

    NICE! what is a print speed and temp???

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +2

      Thank you. It‘s 9mm/s and 250°C for the 3mm nozzle. Speed is key when going big diameters imho. You can lower temp when you have the feeling it‘s too hot.

    • @maxbiagi3091
      @maxbiagi3091 3 года назад

      @@hen3drik its PLA material? I want try strong print with ABS so i think its need veeeery hot hotend 😂😂😂

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +1

      @@maxbiagi3091 yes PLA. The layer bonding is very strong. It might work at lower temps for other material as well.

  • @henriquesilva8124
    @henriquesilva8124 4 месяца назад

    Did you use 1.75mm Filament?

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  4 месяца назад +1

      I used 2.85 back then.

  • @arthurmorgan8966
    @arthurmorgan8966 2 года назад +1

    Spools just disappear, even at 1 or 1.2mm nozzles. It’s too painful to watch. I went back to 0.4 and 0.6

    • @BH4x0r
      @BH4x0r Год назад +1

      in the end you still use the same amount of filament if the walls were as thick, your print just finishes much faster which is a good thing

    • @ISILENTNINJAI
      @ISILENTNINJAI Год назад

      ​@@BH4x0ryou are right on that part. I usually drop my infill to about 8% Because the infill a 15% wastes a lot more material on 1mm nozzle compared to .4mm

    • @BH4x0r
      @BH4x0r Год назад

      @@ISILENTNINJAI I think an IDEX printer would be great for that, have no less dense infill and the 0.4 extruder/hotend would do the infill for example
      I believe a 15% infill part with a .4 infill would be stronger than 8% at 1mm because the infill appears more often, ofcourse the thicker infill will be stronger AT THOSE points but not inbetween

  • @hbert06
    @hbert06 Год назад

    "Naßl" ... verstehe ...

  • @joemulkerins5250
    @joemulkerins5250 Год назад

    Should have just made a 2.8mm nozzle. It needs some backpressure so the plastic pushes to the inner sides of the nozzle.

  • @andreyansimov5442
    @andreyansimov5442 5 месяцев назад

    Not too bad. With the proper nozzle, you can do it. I like thick layers very much.

  • @FRobot-rx4kz
    @FRobot-rx4kz Год назад

    I'd be really curious how such a extremely wide 3mm nozzle performs with "small" layer heights of e.g. 1mm 0.75 mm!

  • @aidanfordsword6954
    @aidanfordsword6954 3 года назад +1

    I have a question about the rock tumbling, could you leave a print in with some cut up copper wire, would it be conductive in any way so you could electroplate it? I have been having horrible results with graphite powder.

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  3 года назад +1

      No, this will not work. Graphite paint need to be polished after applying. Then check that the resistance is around 4kOhm. Then slowly increase current.

    • @aidanfordsword6954
      @aidanfordsword6954 3 года назад

      @@hen3drik that's why graphite paints not working! Thank you very much!

    • @Appri
      @Appri 2 года назад

      @@aidanfordsword6954 copper paint gives better results.

  • @miserablepile
    @miserablepile 7 месяцев назад

    I love the editing, the result, and the instruction, this is so great!

  • @iphoneawesome123
    @iphoneawesome123 2 года назад

    I wonder how long it will take for someone to print a glock 3mm

  • @stefanguiton
    @stefanguiton 2 года назад +1

    Great stuff! Subbed

  • @carbide1968
    @carbide1968 Год назад +6

    Bro, please stop with that horrible music. it's very annoying. your printing is great but at least turn the volume down. love your electroplating videos are awesome. and know we cannot turn the volume down on this end, because your voice will not be heard.

  • @halflife2750
    @halflife2750 Год назад

    hi!, amazing!! slicer? i use ender 5, nozzle 1.2 , height layer 0,96 ; bad result :(

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  Год назад

      Slicer: cura. It‘s tricky. You have to heat a lot and print slow.

  • @mechsparks
    @mechsparks Год назад

    What setting did you used in cura like layer height, speed, extrusion width?

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  Год назад +1

      Oh, I can’t remember exactly but I went very slow on speed. I also extruded with 245°C and up.

  • @alfonsocastillo7815
    @alfonsocastillo7815 2 года назад

    Ur ingenious

  • @invent4.0
    @invent4.0 2 года назад

    oohh noooo😮😮😮

  • @cpace123
    @cpace123 2 года назад

    Settings would be nice

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  2 года назад

      In a nutshell: Print very slow, and very hot. for the final nozzle i went 240°C and 7-10mm/s with PLA. But you have to figure it out for your machine, as these settings will absolutely vary.

  • @bialek.online
    @bialek.online Год назад

    lol i have the same dremel station for vertical operation

  • @bleach_drink_me
    @bleach_drink_me Год назад +1

    Bro you should try this again with some of the cheap cht clone nozzles. Since they have the insert that splits the filament I think the 3mm hole would work .

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  Год назад +1

      Yes, thanks for the tip. Maybe I‘ll try if I have some time!

  • @tonyhill8300
    @tonyhill8300 2 года назад

    and the point being??

    • @hen3drik
      @hen3drik  2 года назад +1

      There is no real point. Some like the esthetics of big layers, some like to find out if it‘s possible to print 3mm width with 2.85mm filament. Just fooling around.😉

    • @felix-dk9tr
      @felix-dk9tr Год назад

      Industrial applications