Can you 3D Print with Hot Glue?
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- Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
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Everyone uses a hot glue gun to explain 3D printing, yet nobody sells hot melt glue filament for a real 3D printer! I wanted to change that and make the first hot melt glue filament, for the giggles but also to 3D print iron-on patches! Let's find out more!
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Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:59 Mosaic's 3D Printed Iron On Patches
03:09 Shredding Glue Sticks
05:19 Extruding Hot Melt Glue Sticks - Attempt 1
07:50 Sponsor
09:38 Extruding Hot Melt Glue Sticks - Attempt 2
12:40 Printing Hot Melt Glue Filament
15:14 3D Printing Iron on Patches
18:08 Summary
#3Dprinting #HotMeltGlue #DIY
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*QUESTION:* What would you use hot melt glue filament for?
why dont you find lower melting point TPU for the sticky side , and then use TPC on the top which melts in slightly highertenps , alterntively there are shoe glues that are flexible after cure, but they smell strong that you can paint on the other side. or maybe press the hot glue into a thin sheets , then cut to size with a plotter maybe ?
Is it possible to mix pla and gluestick you just need to figure out the mixture percentage
I actually don't have a hot glue gun.
@@kira07😊😊😊😊
You can use pla flax instead of glow, it could work very similar and much more easier to print
Finally, a 3d printer that is just a hot glue gun. We've ascended.
😅yeah just wanted to say that because literally everytime when someone doesnt know 3d printers the only way they understand usually is the hot gun xD
We’ve ascended so much that we’ve gone back to square one
@@3DWolfEngineering The real trouble is explaining resin printers 😂 "So yeah. It's upside down and there's this UV sensitive liquid and then..." 😅
@@The_1ntern3t hahaha yeah youre so right 🤣lol... luckely havent had this situation very often because i dont yet have a resin printer😥 dont have a space for the toxic stuff yet but i miss every day i cant create cool detailed stuff like figures, tempplates...
Id propably explain it with very thin drawings you stack ontop of eachother ?
Everything old becomes new eventually.
"I didn't only make it for the giggles." Sounds like giggle addict talk to me.
😂 the video was fun. Just brush some hot glue at the backside of the patch to achieve the same result. 😊
@@chipcode5538I feel one is cleaned than the brush on option.
During the intervention. "Your so obsessed with your giggle that you neglected ME. WE used to giggle TOGETHER. 🥺😭"
Hi Stephen, maybe you might have better luck with higher temp rated hot melt glues. The glues I use at work have a more yellow hue to them versus the crystal clear ones you're using. They melt at a higher temperature but solidify significantly faster. They might be harder as well.
We even buy it pelletized as well as in large diameter sticks. You should have no problem finding pelletized hot melt if you ask around industrial suppliers, it's very commonly used.
for this application i think you need the different melting point for the bottom layer (~150) and top layer ~(200) - otherwise you would melt the patch and get rid of detail
@@gedr7664 he could iron from the INSIDE of the shirt , so the thing that melts first would be the glue . It will be significantly harder to place the stamp perfect but it would fix the problem .
@@gedr7664 maybe if ironed from the inside it would work
My mom has some white glue sticks and she says those high temp ones will burn the absolute hell out of you if it gets on you. Should work really well on fabric though.
Was going to suggest this. Glue sticks have varying cure times and chemical compositions. For fabrics it would also help a lot to have something that didn't soften in the sun 😅
The only thing I'd change about this process is ironing the patches from the fabric side, so more of the heat goes to fabric then hot melt glue THEN tpu, rather than hitting the TPU first. In my experience (with normal patches!) this helps them adhere better because the fabric is heated up to match the glue.
This!
This!!!!
I scrolled to the comments to point that out too XD
Oh hey thanks I actually didn't know that about iron on patches. My jeans always rip at the crotch so I'm always using iron on patches (tacky I know but I love these jeans). The corners of the patches always peel. Didn't think about heating the fabric up as well.
Hope he sees this
This is amazing! I had no idea filaments used to be oiled, totally makes sense though - great work!
@BPSspace @CNCKitchen collab I never expected.
But can you print gluesticks with it?
@EightOneGulf You just gave me a shower thought.
You're asking one of the most important questions in the world right now. Answers are needed for this
With less infill for more glue sticks per glue stick 😂
Hahaha
Is it food safe?!
I do service work at a factory that makes glue sticks, they use a horizontal screw extruder with a 1" nozzle where it gets melted then it gets pulled through a 50ft water bed by a puller belt on the other end. They are indeed coated in oil to prevent them from sticking to the puller belt when they are chopped down into individual sticks.
Water bath? Interesting
So a few months ago Lost in Tech showcased a filament made from PCL (polycaprolone) which melts at low temperature and might very well bind other polymers to textile. PCL pellets are also very easily and readily available in small and medium quantities e.g. as a crafting material, mould making material, temporary tooth filling.
No need to make filament, PCL is already available for medical applications. Price is a bit higher but still acceptable.
Great idea! I think I even have some around here.
PCL pellets work really well to adhere pvc pipes together at odd angles that you can't get connectors for.
@@jonasniesner You can buy PCL filament.
@@CNCKitchen ich könnte dir EVA Granulat zusenden wahlweise in Weiß oder transparent/beige.
PCL in past was used as a hot melt glue and filament out of that is readily available.
Interesting, I have some still lying around. And the XL should be able to handle that and I already have a profile for it. So worth a try.
@@jonasniesner At those temps have to keep it away from any clothes dryer tho.
"PCL filament is a type of 3D printing filament made from a biodegradable and bio-based polymer called polycaprolactone (PCL). PCL is a good choice for beginners and kids because of its low-temp and safety. It is also eco-friendly, food-safe, and non-toxic. PCL has a density of around 1.2 g/cm3 and has exceptional mechanical properties. It melts around 60°C making it a safe thermoplastic to print and has a glass transition temperature of -60°C making the product extremely flexible and tough."
Always happy to see you thinking outside the box. As a practical note though, hot glue is available in a sheet form that maybe you could print on top of then trim off after printing.
Yeah, I was thinking why not just use the iron sheets for printing on. Work great for ironing on fabrics.
Maybe the answer is to make a new extruder that can accept the glue sticks directly :)
Also maybe a smaller nozzle size could make part cooling easier?
Maybe it would be easier and more consistent to design a hot end that can directly take full hot glue sticks, which would eliminate most of the problems you had.
Taking the heating element of a hot glue gun and modifying it a bit might just do the trick.
You could see the panic in the hand movements when you touched the glue lol
👋🤚🖐✊👎🙌👊👏👊🖖🖐👏👊👏
You could build a large extruder to feed the sticks directly into a long conical nozzle to get to normal filament size. Should be easier than chopping everything up :-)
The problem with that is that then we have to melt down the whole stick to temperature and then cool it down very fast so it can spool, the thermal mass is just too high right?
Maybe that could be solved by using some sort of chiller just bellow the nozzle? Like placing a tiny radiator connected to a AC unit in front of a high speed delta fan
Patch makers iron-on a double sided adhesive. Madeira has three different Heat Seal products using different materials: polyamide, polyester, and polyurethane.
This...the whole time I was thinking of Badge Magic like Scouts use. It's basically the same thing without all the work.
Temu has such dirt cheap.
It pains me that u didn't use a cheese grinder
If you manipulate the printing path I bet you could mimic the look and feel of an embroidered patch. That would make this incredibly useful as a potentially cost effective alternative to custom sewn patches.
You can actually embroider TPU directly really well, I make and sew on TPU patches all the time. 👍
An interesting proof of concept, and for someone willing to put in the time probably quite practical and useful. One thing comes to mind, reversing the process, printing PLA onto baking paper stuck down on the build plate (would it stick - don't know), then printing the glue on top of that. The print could easily be lifted with the paper and is already ready for ironing onto the fabric.
I enjoy watching your process so much my friend. Your curiosity and no nonsense approach to problem solving is just incredible. Freezing the gluesticks, modeling temps after the glue gun, adding the oiler, there were so many brilliant little nuggets in this video and I just loved being along for the journey. 👏
Dry ice is used by welders often, so even in a small city or town you should have a welding supply seller nearby who will be able to provide it to you.
plumbing too
Co2 fire extinguishers, where ever locally they are refilled as well.
Hybrid EVA-PLA strength testing!!!!
Yes please! The adherence of the layers is super interesting
Both are having distinct melting points
I'd buy ^&% tons of EVA filament if it were commercially available. Making their own iron-on patches would be the hottest project ever for my middle-schoolers' 3D printing class.
Maybe you could try Avery 3279 ink jet fabric transfers. You create your pattern in your favorite drawing program, print it onto the 3279 paper, use an iron to apply it to a tee shirt or whatever.
Temu has thin sheets of hot melt glue dirt cheap specifically for fabrics if your logo/etc. would be regularly shaped and without voids to cut them out for hot pressing.
@@Jessterrr😢
Bi I nikn o8888
Thats a fascinating concept. Plus incredibly recyclable.
TPU can be ironed onto cloth directly and there is no need for any adhesive. Place the tpu patch down first onto a wax paper, place the cloth over that and a final layer of wax paper then iron on the patch heating through the cloth. The only thing that really takes any practice is melting it with even pressure and not keeping the heat on for to long smearing the tpu out. The results can be great and hold up to many washes before a corner starts to peel off but its no big deal you just iron it again.
I see Temu has hot melt thin sheet material dirt cheap specifically for fabrics, wonder which would hold better, those, or your direct TPU... may have to try and compare!
I second this. I have had great success ironing TPU on cotton.
how many layers and at what layer height would you recommend?
For that matter, you can print TPU straight to fabric, too.
Dont give Joe any ideas, the cast hotglue rocket is cursed enough
An experiment that you learn from is never a waste of time. Really neat to see you using an OmniDrop extruder, They are great will work with any material. Max did a great job designing them.
The idea is great, but to fix problems with making filament: why not make a custom extruder that can work with 10mm hot sticks so that you will eliminate half of the problems.
Yeah for that was my first idea
One thing that comes across my mind as an issue would be the amount of material you're pushing into extruder with one stepper motor step. Wider cross-section of the raw material makes fine control over filament feed more difficult, as the nozzle diameter still remains ~.4mm
I guess the solution in that case would be adding a gearbox to fix the ratio between stepper motor and feeder gear, but then you'd have slower retraction speed, etc., etc.
So while fixing the root issue, attempting to create a custom extruder would definitely bring some new problems into play :)
And now try it in the other way around: 3D print some PLA sticks and feed them into the hot glue gun. Would it work?
💡
@@abcdfucku 🕯️👍
you can get pellets from the shaving aisle in stores, they are used as a waxing strip material.
you can buy hot melt glue pellets in a lot variations for processes like industrial book production
I admire your absolute patience with this project.
3d printed patches have been one of my go-tos for a minute i tried iron on backing, but just sewing them on is what ended up working the best
Wonder if you can blend it with pla🤔
Jetzt muss ich es mal kommentieren nach so vielen beeindruckenden Videos lately: Du bist a Matz! Kodus, Stefan
really great idea, and kudos for being so persistent to reach your goal, think that this filament have some future and would love to try using it myself to make some patches
This hits the sweetest spot for me - i just got into machine embroidery and i am totally going to be doing some 3dp appliques
What if you use a water bath before you try to spoil the glue? Have the filament come out of the machine into a water bath and then loop up into the part of the machine that wraps it around the spool.
I think this may be the right application for that underwater 3d printer...
I use the hot glue gun reference when explaining 3d printing also 😂
Your dedication is amazing
Again, Stefan, your explorations and hard work impressed me. You have such good ideas. Thank you for this vidéo. ❤❤
As StormBurnX said, iron from the fabric side rather than the patch side, that way the TPU doesn't warp as much.
I love how your troubleshooting kind of came full circle back to using filament oilers. It's funny how these issues probably were the same things that the 3d printing pioneers faced.
Thank you so much for the inspiring videos! 😃 Sometimes when I'm tired and the world seems to do everything wrong, I watch some video of yours, because I can trust, that Stefan is meticulous, analytical, organized, and objective in his methods and the presentation and enthusiasm is flawless 😃👍
I need this it compliments my TPU addiction perfectly! I feel like the odd guy out but TPU is by far my favorite thing to print with and design for, yes it has it's challenges but it has so many amazing use cases.
I almost exclusively print in TPU at home.
I think that a thin sheet of hot glue would work better than a filament for the iron on patches. The sheet could be attached to the bed by heating and the tpu patch would be printed on top of the hot glue sheet
Could use the iron from the other side of the shirt, so that you aren't melting anything but the glue.
very cool, love to see creativity in the technical space. Thanks for sharing.
I’ve wondered if this was possible for years!
Thanks for doing it
That's a cool idea.
For the t-shirt you should try ironing the fabric with your logo underneath!
I printed hot glue sticks with filament to repair a failed print>:
thats actually smart...and especially its propably better than a 3d pen
@@3DWolfEngineering I know most 3D pens aren't the best, but I have a Mynt3D Pro pen and it works really well and I haven't had any problems with it and I've had it for a few years now
Definitely cool. It's nice to see something different in this space.
Awesome job! So much effort! Thank you 👍
You should have tried letting it run through a tub of ice water instead of the oiler.
Just expel some hot glue onto the build-plate from the glue gun, then with a cold aluminium plate flatten it to the thickness you want. Maybe a roller would work. If it sticks to the plate it wasn’t cold enough or thick enough. Then print on that
Playing with hot glue was not a waste of time, as you (and we) learned a lot in the process!
Thank you for sharing your experience!
Appreciate it!
I have this idea for a long time and finally someone made it nice.
Later you can make repair videos where you dig the melted or twisted stuff out of the washing machine and dryer. All it will take is one time where the logo goes through a bit too hot a cycle and its all over. Also the hot glue stickiness may migrate into the machine even without physical debonding.
The melt point of low temp hot glue is over 120° C. I doubt most peoples washers and dryers are running over boiling temps
@@billallen6109 It doesnt need to "melt" to be a problem. It just needs to break down. A decent machine will have a heater inside it to bump temps up assuming its not a steam machine. My concern is putting an adhesive that doesnt set is just too much risk.
wow its amazing how much work you put in this! Thank you for showing us the endless possibilitie of using a 3D printer. For me personally, if i were to make iron-on badges for tshirts, i would use adhesive vinyl and cut it with a plotter.
That would spare the troubles of making the hotglue filament and probably money to buy the shredder.
What a fun idea!
I thought I made up the idea of a filament oiler for use with scenting filaments.- but sounds like its a real thing. I love youtube for uniting inventors across the web. keep on building!
Great video! I'm glad that people like you exist, who are to afraid to experiment.
Those patches are awesome and it's so awesome to be wearing a 3d printer patch that, theoretically, you can make.at home!
I have no use for this right now but i very much like your way of thinking and creativity. Good work.
this is fascinating! I always use a glue gun as and example of how printing works so seeing this is oddly full circle! Nice work!
Man, I don't even have a 3D printer. But I love how you approch problems and solve it. This is the kind of entertainment I need.
Stephen is a creative and innovative driving force in the 3D printing community, always hitting us with the most amazing ideas!
The patches are such a great idea. I wish I could make my own with my printer.
Crazy hack, crazy skills! Love it!
Great engineer-thinking as usual. I love your attitude and persistence
This is actually a great project, thanks!
You're so smart. This video was very informative and interesting!
Great work mate!
Amazing proof of concept!
I just bought an Artme3d Mk2.5 extruder and a plastic shredder and now I really want to try this
Very creative! I am sure there is a future for 3D printed adhesive layers!
I asked myself often if this would work. So looks not so nice to do it at home 😅 but I'm happy that you did it
i see a few options some kind of fine powder covering the filament could solve the sticky issue, a stripe of plastic candy caned around it could help with both of its problems but the last 2 have the issue of needing something that can melt about the same temp and mix with it, and some kind of system to cool just the last lair like a slowly filling tank of cooled water can help solidify it.
Mixing the glue with regular filament also came to my mind.
Great video! We'll definitly create our own iron-on patches now.
Thanks for all
I suggest you put shredded plastic with the shredded hot glue sticks to be less flexible
Or u can pass the output hot glue filament on cooled water with ice before u roll it❤
Super cool! I would have never those oiling filament would have been a good idea... Learn something new everyday!
Finally a video that deals with recycling in a practical way. Cheers!
Experimenting and learning is never a waste of time!
It's funny, I always tell people this is what a 3D printer is in its most basic form. The fact that you actually made this video is AMAZING 😂
I have done simple TPU shirts before and with long heat it was stuck for a long time by it self, handled washing and drying with 0 issues. Later I have tried and Even PLA works well with fabric.
A cold working tip: freeze the blender pitcher also for extending the time you can cut it and remove easily.
It reminded me of my whip cream making days, it goes much better when you freeze the bowl and the whisk or mix blades.
You could probably mix 15% parrafin in or a number of other things, the sticks could just be a binder in your spool maker.
i would buy patches!!!! ive allready thought about it but im a novice in 3dprinting and havet got to TPU yet, but i have some custom patches done!!
awesome work!
I was waiting for someone to do this
I have an inkling that it would work really well to print your colors first, then the hot melt atop, giving you that nice surface finish of the bed
You, Sir, are crazy in the best possible way.
This is what makes 3D Printing fun. Trying new things no matter how ridiculous and sometimes coming out with a winner.
That is cool, I don't think I would want to try making my own filament if it's that hard to make. But I would totally buy some.
I researched the hot glue topic last year but didn't found anything so gave up, good to see a video on it 👍
You are a great innovator!
I did this with straight PLA a few months ago and at the right temperature, it fuses with the fabric. Can be a decent idea for some "armored" fabrics.
There is a sort of glue filament which is callled Pva. Some printers can use it and it is most common with double nozzle printers. I think it is really helpful because it is a support material that can dissolve in warm water.
Love it! If anybody could pull this off, it's you!
I thought it was very interesting. I can imagine printing pieces which can be assembled to form large objects, using hot glue printed edges, or attaching printed parts to other types of materials. Thank you for sharing.
Amazing! With no actual insight on the details, I imagine this wouldn't be too environmentally friendly, but great for costume purposes (videography/theater props, cosplay, etc) and for prototyping clothing. Plus I'm more excited by the possible uses for regular 3d printing, because of the properties.
Worth looking into: there are glue sticks with different melting points, for specialized purposes there are low melting glue sticks for example.
Bro ich klick auf das video und hab direkt das gefühl gehabt, dass du aus deutschland komms. Sber sehr cool, was du machst❤