I just found this filament machine online and your video showed so many great details about this machine, really enjoyed watching it come together and produce filament from shredded 3D prints :D Thanks Cat, great work! I look forward to seeing more of your videos :) High five from New Zealand 🥝
Hello dear Steve. Thank you so much 😊 I’m glad you like it. It’s really satisfying to turn the trash into new filament. I’m really surprised that it comes out in such a great quality. And it has zero stringing.
Yes, I will for sure. I‘m printing all the parts for the MK2 version at the moment. As soon as I am finished, I will record the upgrade process. Luckily I can use lots of the hardware parts of the MK1 for the upgrade to the MK2.
Thank you very much for your video demonstration. In your experience with this system, how accurate is the size of the filament? ±0.02MM, ±0.03MM, ±0.05mm
It depends how well you have dialed in the process.When you are using shredded material Ii’s very important to have an even particle size. Otherwise the material can’t feed into the extruder evenly, which would cause an inconsistent material flow. The accuracy on my side is between +/-0.02mm & +/-0.03mm. The quality of the parts that I have printed with the material so far is really excellent.
Hello, a question, I see that you used the RAMP 1.4 card, that card is powered by 12 VDC, is that how you powered it down? but on the artme 3D site the power supply is 24 VDC. I hope you can answer.
@@choschiba we'd like to perform the complete process, collecting, shredding und then make filament out of it. We don't have room but we have ideas - so perhaps in the future we'll be able to achieve that goal.
This is an excelent design. Of course the to keep tradition of the 3D Printing Community, I can already see where I would want to upgrade it. By swapping out the heating elements with AC 120v or 220v heating elements, and using a solid state AC relay I would think it could be more efficient, and demand a lot less from the 24v power supply.
It smells as if you are printing the filament with your 3D printer. As you might not know how others respond to the smell of the melted plastics, I would not recommend to set it up in an office environment. The place I have set it up at is at our Makerspace. It is a huge open space where I can open up the window. As we are also shredding and injection molding other plastics as PP, PE and HDPE we are going to buy a mobile filtration unit, as those kind of plastics smell even stronger than PLA and PETG. Maybe such a filtration system would be an option for you too. But it's not that cheap.
The ruler belongs to the Makerspace. I also have one at home, which I bought during one of my business when I used to travel to China. If you search the internet for: „Metal ruler inch and cm“ you can find them easily. I like them much more than the plastic ones. If you want to run an exacto knife along it, you don’t have to worry that you shave a piece off of it.
@@choschiba Thanks for your reply. I have many steel rulers myself and the longest I have is 2000mm. It was the one with the thin width I was refering to. I suppose it's about 10-15mm wide?
The next time I’m at the Makerspace, I will take a look to find the one you are looking for. I‘ll check if there is a company name written on it. The smallest one we have there isn’t longer than approx. 200mm
What is your printer behind in Orange? I loved that video. Precipus plastic extruders were too expensive, great finding that one at a reasonable price.
The 3D printer that I am using is the very famous Prusa MK3S. In the meantime they are selling it as the version MK4S. I have upgraded my MK3S to the version MK3.9. I can absolutely recommend this brand.
Es gibt Videos hier auf RUclips wo man sieht wie es getestet wird. Aber das reicht nur für ganz, ganz dünne Teile. Also Brims oder dünne Stützstrukturen. Für mehr reicht die Leistung nicht. Wir haben bei uns im Makerspace einen total robusten Shredder mit einem starken Motor und Stahl Messern von der Firma Plastic Preneuer. Selbst der müht sich bei dickeren 3D gedruckten Teilen manchmal echt ab. Das geschreddert Plastic darf nicht größer als 3mm sein, sonst rieselt es nicht richtig in die Extruder Schnecke. Du könntest mal auf der Webseite von Precious Plastic nachschauen. www.preciousplastic.com/solutions/machines/basic
I have set up the filament extruder at our local Makerspace. We are a Precious Plastics recycling point. We shred HDPE, PE and PP using a heavy duty plastic shredder from a company called Plastic Preneur from Austria. We also have an injection and extrusion machine from them. At the moment I will focus on extruding PETG and PLA, as I have a big amount of 3d printed waste. Once I have processed that, I would give HDPE a try. But not PET. It tends to crystallize really quickly if it isn't extruding permanently. And the temperature window it is liquid at is very narrow. If you are not spot on it immediately clogs your nozzle and extrusion screw. Once it is crystallized, it's hard and you can't get it out anymore. So the risk of destroying your gear is quite high. That's why the PETBot onky deforms the pre-cut PET strip instead of extruding it from molten plastic. When printing with PET filament, your temperature has to be spot on.
I can really recommend it. It’s really helpful that you assemble it by yourself. It helps you to understand how it works. And the filament that you produce is really great 👍🏼
@zhiyonglv www.artme-3d.de/produkte/ Please read the documentation. I am using the MK1. In the meantime they are selling the MK2 which might be different than mine regarding the speed.
This is awesome, I would really love to know if this filament can be used in a printer such as Bambu lab (P1s P1p or S1 carbon.) I would like to print using this filament but in high speeds. I am not sure if that would be possible. Have you tried printing at higher speeds?
I guess it depends on what your raw material is made out of. In this case it’s a mixture of Prusament and Purefill PETG. So I don’t really see any reason why it shouldn’t work. Unluckily I don’t own any Bambu Lab printer. The one that I created a video about was loaned, so I could give it a try.
@@choschiba Thanks for this information. I would like to use PETG pellets. I can see from the video you used shredded pellets of PETG and it came out awesome.
hallo danke erst einmal für das gute video, ich würde mir gerne ein artme 3d kaufen und hätte da mal 1-2 fragen. Hast du alle gedruckten Teile in petg angefertigt ? Um welches auf der artme 3d seite angebotenes kit handelt es sich in deinem video genau, möchte auch geschredderte reste wieder in filament umwandeln. Welches Netzteil verwendest du? und zu guter letzt wie schredderst du die sachen genau ? nur in dem mixer wenn ja um welchen handelt es sich da genau? ich danke dir sehr im voraus für die ganzen infos. mfg martin s.
Hallo Martin. In dem Video handelt es sich um den MKI. Mittlerweile gibt es aber den MKII. Bitte erkundige Dich bei David Pfeifer (Besitzer von Artme3D) welches Netzteil Du kaufen musst. Leider habe ich alle Teile für den Upgrade im Makerspace, daher kann ich nicht nachschauen welches Netzteil ich gekauft habe. Ich hatte kürzlich einen Schlaganfall. Deshalb hat sich das Upgrade verzögert. Ich muss auf meine Gesundheit schauen. Daher bin ich jetzt etwas langsamer unterwegs. Ich werde demnächst nämlich meinen Extruder auf die neue Version upgraden um up to date zu sein. Ich shreddere erst mit dem grossen Shredder. Allerdings sind die Partikel dann noch zu gross. Als Blender solltest Du einen Mixer benutzen der einen Glas Behälter hat. Meiner ist von der Marke Kitchen Aid. Der Vorteil ist, dass man bei denen auch Ersatzteile bekommt. Vor dem Extruden musst Du das Shreddergut unbedingt für mindestens 4 Stunden auf einem Backblech im Ofen trocknen. Ansonsten hast Du zu viel Feuchtigkeit im Material. Das gibt dann Luftblasen im Filament.
puh da musste ich erst mal schlucken .. das tut mir leid das dir das passiert ist ich hoffe dir geht es dementsprechend wieder besser, da vorab schon mal gute besserung.danke für die schnelle Rückmeldung. wegen dem netzteil frage ich im shop mal nach. schönes wochenende
Your video is so good. Your editing and production must be a lot of work. I appreciate the post. This video did their company a big favor. I hope yours is free. Seems like a lot of work when you consider that price. I think it's just too much money to justify. I can buy a whole lot of spools of filament for 659 Euro = very nearly $1000 Canadian, plus shipping.
Guten Tag, ich würde mir auch gern ein solchen extruder kaufen, und bin auf deren seite gegangen, jedoch gibt es dort 2 pakete, einmal mit high und einmal mit low compression screw. vllt können sie mir weiterhelfen, was genau ist der unterschied, bzw mit was haben sie die bessere erfahrung gemacht, würde hauptsächlich PLA und PETG recycln wollen, vllt etwas ABS und TPU aber das muss ich dann schauen. grüße und noch einen schönen tag :D
Ich habe den Set mit beiden Extruder Schnecken gekauft. Die Schnecke mit der hohen Kompression habe ich momentan für recycelte Materialien im Einsatz. artme-3d.myshopify.com/products/extrusion-screw-for-the-original-desktop-filament-extruder-e1-7 Hier findest Du die Beschreibung.
Nice, the only thing missing here is, how to get the own 3dprints shredded, so it can be used in that machine. Maybe you can share something about that process too.
@@jakestavinsky3480that’s exactly what I am using. But only when it comes to refining the already shredded parts to a finer particle size. Our shredder creates a diameter of 5-8mm. The filament extruder needs 3mm. The thickness of the 3D printed parts that we are dealing with wouldn’t allow to use a blender. It would be damaged in no time!!
I think this is really cool. Im in the u.s. so i don't think this works for me, lol. Also its a little too expensive right now. I hope the price lowers soon. But overall, i enjoyed your video, thank you for sharing
This is 659 Euros right now PLUS you must shred the old filament which is more equipment (Blender doesn't last long doing this) PLUS you have to sieve it PLUS you have to dry it...and that's before the failures start. My question is "How much printing do you do"? One would have to use Hundreds of reels to make it a financially viable option, and that doesn't take into account the hundreds of hours actually doing it (not including failures).
I am part of the „Precious Plastic“ movement. I have created a mark on the Prusa recycling world map: world.prusa3d.com/user/cat3d-16272 So once in a while users are sending me their 3D printed waste. So I really have enough material that I can extrude.
Da ich höre das Deine Muttersprache Deutsch wäre, frage ich in Deutsch....😅 Funktioniert es gut?...hattest Du viel ärger damit? Überlege mir auch so einen zu kaufen.😊 Grüsse Roy
Hallo Roy. Bis auf den Winder und dem Mechanismus, welcher das Filament hoch zieht, bin ich mit der MK1 Version total zufrieden. Da ich mit meinem Kanal jedoch up to date sein möchte, bin ich gerade dabei auf die Version MK2 upzugraden. Wenn Du jetzt einen Kit kauftst, so erhältst Du sowieso automatisch die Version MK2. Bei der wurde the Aufwickeleinheit und der Mechanismus welcher das Filament hoch zieht deutlich verbessert. Das sollte nun also absolut keine Probleme mehr bereiten.
@@choschiba Danke viel mals für Deine Antwort.😊 Denke ich muss so einen haben, das macht sinn. Habe noch eine Frage.....wie shredderst du das alte Filament, bzw mit was? Grüsse
" @TOYSrROYS Unser Makerspace ist ein "Precious Plastics" Recycling Stützpunkt. Daher besitzen wir einen sehr stabilen Shredder von der Firma "Plastic Preneur" aus Österreich. Dieser ist jedoch sehr teuer. Ausserdem erzeugt er eine Partikelgrösse von 8-10mm Durchmesser. Für den Extruder benötigt man allerdings einen Durchmesser von maximal 3mm. Momentan behelfe ich mir mit einem Smoothie Mixer, welcher ein Glas- anstatt einem Plastikbehälter besitzt. Damit kann ich die Korngrösse auf 3mm reduzieren. Da ich jedoch sehr viel Filament in der Zukunft herstellen möchte, werde ich nach einer Alternative Ausschau halten, welche gleich einen Durchmesser von 3mm erzeugen kann. Dieser wird dann nur noch für die Filament Herstellung und nicht das Shreddsern von Plastik Abfällen aus HDPE, PP und PE. Der Shredder ist das teuerste Gerät in diesem Prozess. Kaufts Du billig, so wirst Du zwei Mal kaufen müssen. Ich weiss auch noch nicht, welcher Shredder es sein wird.
@@choschiba Danke für die ausführliche Antwort, dachte du hast da trick 17 schon 😅 .... bin eben schon länger am ausschau halten wegen shredder etc...😆
Thank you so much. Yes, definitely. In the beginning I was a bit confused and thought that I would have to adjust everything manually. But then I learned that the automatic mode takes care about everything. You just have to choose the right temperature and fan settings. The only thing that I still have to adjust is the tension of the filament winder. It doesn’t work properly. But David, the owner of Artme3D told me how I can adjust and therefore solve the problem.
.... danke für das informative Video, ist mir aber immer noch zu kostspielig. Soviel "TrashFilament" sammelt sich bi mir nicht an. Aber sicher eine gute Lösung für Vieldrucker. (Wo ist die Katze - nicht gesehen)
@@choschiba wait I thought if I bought the full kit it would come with all the parts. I didn’t realize I’d have to 3-D print anything. I don’t even have a 3-D printer. I need to remind myself to not buy from you guys then if that’s the case where it doesn’t come with all the parts in the kit.
I’m buying milk at the grocery store at least once a week. I always take the #2 HDPE milk cartons to a recycle place afterwards. But I hear that these recycles are sent overseas and sometimes dumped into the ocean. So I would love to be able to recycle my #2 HDPE milk cartons into 3d printing filament. (Yes I've heard it's a material that is tough to print with). and then I can use the filament to print things for around the house. Here are the issues I'm running into: CAN I BUY A MACHINE? I'm finding it difficult to find a reasonably priced pre-built 3d filament extruder machine on the internet that can handle HDPE. I tried reaching out to Fixtruder to ask if they sold a machine that could turn my milk cartons into 3d printing filament. I was told: "This issue has been discussed in the 3D printing community for a long time. This type of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) plastic shrinks a lot, does not stick to the table, clogs the nozzle, and due to the high shrinkage it has virtually no interlayer adhesion. The extrusion production method is universal. In principle, this can be done with our extruders. You will have to experiment because the properties of different plastics are not clear. You will need to dry it well and experiment with temperatures and cooling." So now I’m asking them to recommend a good machine that can handle this. CAN I BUILD THE MACHINE? You'll come across websites like Precious Plastics that say here are the blueprints to make one of your own. So I start looking through the files and I don't know how to use CAD or do any of this stuff, so building my own might be tough. I tried watching a bunch of “DIY” youtube videos. Some of the videos made me realize that I’d have to buy a whole bunch of tools that I don’t know how to use to perform tasks like welding. (Tools that i’d probably never use again). Other videos didn’t include full blown step-by-step instructions. Some don’t even have a talking voice, just visuals that don't fully explain it in a way that caters to someone like me who doesn’t understand what they’re doing in the video. There were some videos with talking, but they flash a quick image on the screen of an electronics diagram and don’t go into full detail about how to build it. Is there a website I can go to, to get someone to build the machine for me? CAN I USE SOMEONE ELSE'S MACHINE TO RECYCLE MY MILK CARTONS? I tried googling programs where I could turn in my plastic milk bottles to recycle companies in exchange for 3d printer filament. The closest I found was but I believe they only collect my filament waste, failed prints, supports and brims. I don't think they accept #2 HDPE milk jugs. I'm located in Georgia and I tried to use the Precious plastics map to see what was around me. I saw a recycling symbol in South Carolina which took me to the website of Anchor Shred & Recycle Co. I'm reading their website but I'm confused about what they can do to help me recycle my milk cartons into 3d printing filament. Ok so I don't know how to build a machine, I don't see any reasonably priced machines to buy and I don't see any recycling places nearby that would exchange my milk cartons for 3d printing filament. Are there services out there that I'm not aware of, that could help me accomplish any of these tasks? Any help would be greatly appreciated. I'm new to the world of 3D printing filament. @@choschiba
Yes, I will. But first I want to work a bit more with it. So far it has worked really great. I‘ve already printed with the filament and works and looks absolutely nice!
The puller, winder speeds are not consistent. The biggest problem is not allowing the filament enough time to cool. Before take up. This causes problems with ovality. Especially with polycarbonate, and nylon. Great for show and tell. But definitely not for. Efficient production. If it works for you great. I say this with 24 years of extrusion experience.
I have only ran industrial extruders Egan and Davis Standard for lamination molding to smaller medical extruders for medical tubing and silicone mandrel. I also have ran injection molding machines. Very interested in 3d printing and possible filament production on a smaller scale
It's a cool machine, but its output of 150 grams per hour makes you question the feasibility and risks. If it were possible to provide a productivity of 500 grams per hour, it would be much more promising.
@@choschiba What prevents you from taking a larger diameter pipe and drill? Accordingly, the heater is more powerful. I think the price will be more reasonable.
It's cool that they found a way for us to make our own filament out of waste.
Yes, it really is.
Oh, this is wonderful! I hadn’t heard about the Artme3D. It's very nice with the gravity extrusion and that it doesn’t require virgin resin too!😊
Yes, it’s really great that it works without virgin material. Initially I was really sceptical if that would be possible!
I just found this filament machine online and your video showed so many great details about this machine, really enjoyed watching it come together and produce filament from shredded 3D prints :D Thanks Cat, great work! I look forward to seeing more of your videos :) High five from New Zealand 🥝
Hello dear Steve. Thank you so much 😊 I’m glad you like it. It’s really satisfying to turn the trash into new filament. I’m really surprised that it comes out in such a great quality. And it has zero stringing.
This is really cool and now I wish I'd saved more of my failed prints. What a neat project, and good demo of its functionality.
Thank you so much. Yes, I also wish that I would have saved more of my filament waste in the past. But it’s never to late.
❤ Really enjoyed watching your video.
Thank you so much. 😊
Really cool machine!.... Been waiting for something like this😊
It really is. It’s so satisfying being able to turn the waste filament into new one. 😊
@@choschiba I know.... I was collecting my failed prints but didn't find a solution that was cost effective and would fit in my office
Hey Cat i just got mine building it. this does take awhile to build. slowly getting it together but im using your video also as a instruction guide
Oh wow, that makes me really proud 🤗
congratulations... great video, and great skills you have, God bless You
Thank you 🙏🏼 very much.
Hi what pretty cool that you manage to get good filament.
It takes a bit of practice. But then it works quite well.
Pretty cool looking unit!
Thank very much buddy. Yes, it’s so satisfying to turn the scrap into new filament.
23:15 would a lock washer under the wing nut keep it from coming loose?
I can give it a try
could you make some more videos on the artme 3d?
Yes, I will for sure. I‘m printing all the parts for the MK2 version at the moment. As soon as I am finished, I will record the upgrade process. Luckily I can use lots of the hardware parts of the MK1 for the upgrade to the MK2.
mine is all most done now finding pellets is the hard part@@choschiba
@@jamessmallwood7448 hey cool. Why don’t you buy them from David Pfeifer? He is selling them at his Artme3D store.
I’ve search everyone comment but here my question the extension to the hopper will that help produce the 1kg spool? If not how much will it produce?
Yes, the extension rings attached to the hopper will hold about 1kg
How do you shredded the fails parts and i mean the big machine you refer to in the video , what is it ?
ruclips.net/video/YzQom6DhLk4/видео.htmlsi=tFa8x84LxwDIDwS7
The shredder is from a company called „Plastic Preneur“
@@choschiba very nice how much ?
Thank you very much for your video demonstration. In your experience with this system, how accurate is the size of the filament? ±0.02MM, ±0.03MM, ±0.05mm
It depends how well you have dialed in the process.When you are using shredded material Ii’s very important to have an even particle size. Otherwise the material can’t feed into the extruder evenly, which would cause an inconsistent material flow. The accuracy on my side is between +/-0.02mm & +/-0.03mm. The quality of the parts that I have printed with the material so far is really excellent.
Hello, a question, I see that you used the RAMP 1.4 card, that card is powered by 12 VDC, is that how you powered it down? but on the artme 3D site the power supply is 24 VDC. I hope you can answer.
Yes, you’re right. That was the version 1. In the meantime I have updated to version 2. The will be more videos about it in the future.
If we only had more space we would try one of those!
The footprint is really small. What’s rather big is the required shredder if you want to use recycled material.
@@choschiba we'd like to perform the complete process, collecting, shredding und then make filament out of it. We don't have room but we have ideas - so perhaps in the future we'll be able to achieve that goal.
@@U.10.makerspacethat sounds great! Keeping fingers crossed that you will be able to realize it soon.
This is an excelent design. Of course the to keep tradition of the 3D Printing Community, I can already see where I would want to upgrade it. By swapping out the heating elements with AC 120v or 220v heating elements, and using a solid state AC relay I would think it could be more efficient, and demand a lot less from the 24v power supply.
The machine is totally open source. So you can definitely do that.
What kind of fume/smell does it produce? Does it need to be isolated or could be around in office areas where other people might share the space?
It smells as if you are printing the filament with your 3D printer. As you might not know how others respond to the smell of the melted plastics, I would not recommend to set it up in an office environment. The place I have set it up at is at our Makerspace. It is a huge open space where I can open up the window. As we are also shredding and injection molding other plastics as PP, PE and HDPE we are going to buy a mobile filtration unit, as those kind of plastics smell even stronger than PLA and PETG.
Maybe such a filtration system would be an option for you too. But it's not that cheap.
how do you initially shred the big parts ?
ruclips.net/video/YzQom6DhLk4/видео.htmlsi=zjBmZCl4pIbVNNpw
hi, aluminium profiles are 3030 or 4040?
I will have a look next Wednesday when I’m back at the Makerspace
I loved the video work perfect and very beautiful, Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Big hug from Brazil. 🪚🇧🇷
Thank you so much. Hug 🤗 back
Great video! Where did you bought the steel ruler 7:49 in the video?
The ruler belongs to the Makerspace. I also have one at home, which I bought during one of my business when I used to travel to China. If you search the internet for: „Metal ruler inch and cm“ you can find them easily. I like them much more than the plastic ones. If you want to run an exacto knife along it, you don’t have to worry that you shave a piece off of it.
@@choschiba Thanks for your reply. I have many steel rulers myself and the longest I have is 2000mm. It was the one with the thin width I was refering to. I suppose it's about 10-15mm wide?
The next time I’m at the Makerspace, I will take a look to find the one you are looking for. I‘ll check if there is a company name written on it. The smallest one we have there isn’t longer than approx. 200mm
Can you build this DYI following the website part list?
Yes, that’s the plan when you buy the kit. You will have to 3D print lots of parts in advance.
How does the machine know when the spool is full?
You will have to weigh the granules. What you add in to the reservoir will be the amount of filament that you make.
What is your printer behind in Orange? I loved that video. Precipus plastic extruders were too expensive, great finding that one at a reasonable price.
The 3D printer that I am using is the very famous Prusa MK3S. In the meantime they are selling it as the version MK4S. I have upgraded my MK3S to the version MK3.9. I can absolutely recommend this brand.
reicht es einen Papierschredder zu modifizieren? wie klein exakt müssen die teile sein? Online steht 5mm aber ist der da zickig
also kannst du einen weg empfehlen fürs schreddern
Es gibt Videos hier auf RUclips wo man sieht wie es getestet wird. Aber das reicht nur für ganz, ganz dünne Teile. Also Brims oder dünne Stützstrukturen. Für mehr reicht die Leistung nicht. Wir haben bei uns im Makerspace einen total robusten Shredder mit einem starken Motor und Stahl Messern von der Firma Plastic Preneuer. Selbst der müht sich bei dickeren 3D gedruckten Teilen manchmal echt ab. Das geschreddert Plastic darf nicht größer als 3mm sein, sonst rieselt es nicht richtig in die Extruder Schnecke. Du könntest mal auf der Webseite von Precious Plastic nachschauen. www.preciousplastic.com/solutions/machines/basic
So I am interested in buying one of these. Would I have to print anything for the machine or does it all come with what is shown in the video?
All the blue parts have been 3D printed by myself.
Can this melt HDPE? And PET?
I have set up the filament extruder at our local Makerspace. We are a Precious Plastics recycling point. We shred HDPE, PE and PP using a heavy duty plastic shredder from a company called Plastic Preneur from Austria. We also have an injection and extrusion machine from them. At the moment I will focus on extruding PETG and PLA, as I have a big amount of 3d printed waste. Once I have processed that, I would give HDPE a try. But not PET. It tends to crystallize really quickly if it isn't extruding permanently. And the temperature window it is liquid at is very narrow. If you are not spot on it immediately clogs your nozzle and extrusion screw. Once it is crystallized, it's hard and you can't get it out anymore. So the risk of destroying your gear is quite high. That's why the PETBot onky deforms the pre-cut PET strip instead of extruding it from molten plastic. When printing with PET filament, your temperature has to be spot on.
Hello, how is the effect of using DIY Artme3D filament extruder
I can really recommend it. It’s really helpful that you assemble it by yourself. It helps you to understand how it works. And the filament that you produce is really great 👍🏼
So good, incredible. How long does it take to make one kilogram of consumables@@choschiba
@zhiyonglv www.artme-3d.de/produkte/ Please read the documentation. I am using the MK1. In the meantime they are selling the MK2 which might be different than mine regarding the speed.
Cool video.
Thank you very much 😀
Hi im from Indonesia, you so smart 👍 sorry for my bad English
Thank you very much
Can you get this in the USA?
You will buy it directly from the producer. He is located in Germany. Please look 👀 for the link under my video.
How has your experience been with this model im on the fence about buying this or a wellzoom. Does this come with the1.75mm nozzle when extruding
Yes, it comes with the nozzle for creating filament with a diameter of 1.75mm
How could I fabricate the Extruder screw high & low compression?
Please do yourself a favor and buy what you need from www.artme-3d.de
How would I buy one from South Africa
Please visit the website www.artme-3d.de The language can be changed from German to English on the lower right.
This is awesome, I would really love to know if this filament can be used in a printer such as Bambu lab (P1s P1p or S1 carbon.) I would like to print using this filament but in high speeds. I am not sure if that would be possible. Have you tried printing at higher speeds?
I guess it depends on what your raw material is made out of. In this case it’s a mixture of Prusament and Purefill PETG. So I don’t really see any reason why it shouldn’t work. Unluckily I don’t own any Bambu Lab printer. The one that I created a video about was loaned, so I could give it a try.
@@choschiba Thanks for this information. I would like to use PETG pellets. I can see from the video you used shredded pellets of PETG and it came out awesome.
@@maina_irungu_ pellets will work without any problems. Please buy the same kit as I have. It contains both extruder spindles.
hallo danke erst einmal für das gute video, ich würde mir gerne ein artme 3d kaufen und hätte da mal 1-2 fragen.
Hast du alle gedruckten Teile in petg angefertigt ?
Um welches auf der artme 3d seite angebotenes kit handelt es sich in deinem video genau, möchte auch geschredderte reste wieder in filament umwandeln.
Welches Netzteil verwendest du? und zu guter letzt wie schredderst du die sachen genau ? nur in dem mixer wenn ja um welchen handelt es sich da genau?
ich danke dir sehr im voraus für die ganzen infos.
mfg martin s.
Hallo Martin. In dem Video handelt es sich um den MKI. Mittlerweile gibt es aber den MKII. Bitte erkundige Dich bei David Pfeifer (Besitzer von Artme3D) welches Netzteil Du kaufen musst. Leider habe ich alle Teile für den Upgrade im Makerspace, daher kann ich nicht nachschauen welches Netzteil ich gekauft habe. Ich hatte kürzlich einen Schlaganfall. Deshalb hat sich das Upgrade verzögert. Ich muss auf meine Gesundheit schauen. Daher bin ich jetzt etwas langsamer unterwegs. Ich werde demnächst nämlich meinen Extruder auf die neue Version upgraden um up to date zu sein. Ich shreddere erst mit dem grossen Shredder. Allerdings sind die Partikel dann noch zu gross. Als Blender solltest Du einen Mixer benutzen der einen Glas Behälter hat. Meiner ist von der Marke Kitchen Aid. Der Vorteil ist, dass man bei denen auch Ersatzteile bekommt. Vor dem Extruden musst Du das Shreddergut unbedingt für mindestens 4 Stunden auf einem Backblech im Ofen trocknen. Ansonsten hast Du zu viel Feuchtigkeit im Material. Das gibt dann Luftblasen im Filament.
puh da musste ich erst mal schlucken .. das tut mir leid das dir das passiert ist ich hoffe dir geht es dementsprechend wieder besser, da vorab schon mal gute besserung.danke für die schnelle Rückmeldung.
wegen dem netzteil frage ich im shop mal nach. schönes wochenende
gefällt mir ..danke dafür 🙂
Danke vielmals. 😊
Your video is so good. Your editing and production must be a lot of work. I appreciate the post. This video did their company a big favor. I hope yours is free. Seems like a lot of work when you consider that price. I think it's just too much money to justify. I can buy a whole lot of spools of filament for 659 Euro = very nearly $1000 Canadian, plus shipping.
Thank you very much for your compliment. The price does show up on his web-shop: artme-3d.myshopify.com/
Guten Tag,
ich würde mir auch gern ein solchen extruder kaufen, und bin auf deren seite gegangen, jedoch gibt es dort 2 pakete, einmal mit high und einmal mit low compression screw.
vllt können sie mir weiterhelfen, was genau ist der unterschied, bzw mit was haben sie die bessere erfahrung gemacht, würde hauptsächlich PLA und PETG recycln wollen, vllt etwas ABS und TPU aber das muss ich dann schauen.
grüße und noch einen schönen tag :D
Ich habe den Set mit beiden Extruder Schnecken gekauft. Die Schnecke mit der hohen Kompression habe ich momentan für recycelte Materialien im Einsatz. artme-3d.myshopify.com/products/extrusion-screw-for-the-original-desktop-filament-extruder-e1-7 Hier findest Du die Beschreibung.
Nice, the only thing missing here is, how to get the own 3dprints shredded, so it can be used in that machine. Maybe you can share something about that process too.
Manually use a cheese shredder idk
👌🏼🤣
That will be the next video.
A heavy duty blender does the trick usually without much effort
@@jakestavinsky3480that’s exactly what I am using. But only when it comes to refining the already shredded parts to a finer particle size. Our shredder creates a diameter of 5-8mm. The filament extruder needs 3mm. The thickness of the 3D printed parts that we are dealing with wouldn’t allow to use a blender. It would be damaged in no time!!
What is your thoughts?
If you watch my video, you will see what I think about the machine.
How's it running after 3 months Cat?
Perfectly. I have created several spools of filament. I can really recommend it.
amazon?
Could you please write an entire sentence, so I understand what you mean? Please read what is written underneath the video.
I think this is really cool. Im in the u.s. so i don't think this works for me, lol. Also its a little too expensive right now. I hope the price lowers soon. But overall, i enjoyed your video, thank you for sharing
This is 659 Euros right now PLUS you must shred the old filament which is more equipment (Blender doesn't last long doing this) PLUS you have to sieve it PLUS you have to dry it...and that's before the failures start.
My question is "How much printing do you do"? One would have to use Hundreds of reels to make it a financially viable option, and that doesn't take into account the hundreds of hours actually doing it (not including failures).
I am part of the „Precious Plastic“ movement. I have created a mark on the Prusa recycling world map: world.prusa3d.com/user/cat3d-16272
So once in a while users are sending me their 3D printed waste. So I really have enough material that I can extrude.
cool!
Thank you so much. It really is.
Do you ship to Australia?
I don‘t sell anything. If you want to buy the Artme3D extruder, you have to visit their website.
lady you‘re so cool
Thank you so much 😊
Da ich höre das Deine Muttersprache Deutsch wäre, frage ich in Deutsch....😅
Funktioniert es gut?...hattest Du viel ärger damit?
Überlege mir auch so einen zu kaufen.😊
Grüsse
Roy
Hallo Roy. Bis auf den Winder und dem Mechanismus, welcher das Filament hoch zieht, bin ich mit der MK1 Version total zufrieden. Da ich mit meinem Kanal jedoch up to date sein möchte, bin ich gerade dabei auf die Version MK2 upzugraden. Wenn Du jetzt einen Kit kauftst, so erhältst Du sowieso automatisch die Version MK2. Bei der wurde the Aufwickeleinheit und der Mechanismus welcher das Filament hoch zieht deutlich verbessert. Das sollte nun also absolut keine Probleme mehr bereiten.
@@choschiba Danke viel mals für Deine Antwort.😊
Denke ich muss so einen haben, das macht sinn.
Habe noch eine Frage.....wie shredderst du das alte Filament, bzw mit was?
Grüsse
" @TOYSrROYS Unser Makerspace ist ein "Precious Plastics" Recycling Stützpunkt. Daher besitzen wir einen sehr stabilen Shredder von der Firma "Plastic Preneur" aus Österreich. Dieser ist jedoch sehr teuer. Ausserdem erzeugt er eine Partikelgrösse von 8-10mm Durchmesser. Für den Extruder benötigt man allerdings einen Durchmesser von maximal 3mm. Momentan behelfe ich mir mit einem Smoothie Mixer, welcher ein Glas- anstatt einem Plastikbehälter besitzt. Damit kann ich die Korngrösse auf 3mm reduzieren. Da ich jedoch sehr viel Filament in der Zukunft herstellen möchte, werde ich nach einer Alternative Ausschau halten, welche gleich einen Durchmesser von 3mm erzeugen kann. Dieser wird dann nur noch für die Filament Herstellung und nicht das Shreddsern von Plastik Abfällen aus HDPE, PP und PE. Der Shredder ist das teuerste Gerät in diesem Prozess. Kaufts Du billig, so wirst Du zwei Mal kaufen müssen. Ich weiss auch noch nicht, welcher Shredder es sein wird.
@@choschiba Danke für die ausführliche Antwort, dachte du hast da trick 17 schon 😅 .... bin eben schon länger am ausschau halten wegen shredder etc...😆
Delicious.
Wow! Great video and super detailed. Would you recommend this unit a month later? I’ve been thinking of getting one. Cheers :)
Thank you so much. Yes, definitely. In the beginning I was a bit confused and thought that I would have to adjust everything manually. But then I learned that the automatic mode takes care about everything. You just have to choose the right temperature and fan settings. The only thing that I still have to adjust is the tension of the filament winder. It doesn’t work properly. But David, the owner of Artme3D told me how I can adjust and therefore solve the problem.
.... danke für das informative Video, ist mir aber immer noch zu kostspielig. Soviel "TrashFilament" sammelt sich bi mir nicht an. Aber sicher eine gute Lösung für Vieldrucker. (Wo ist die Katze - nicht gesehen)
Ja, das verstehe ich natürlich. Ich habe das Video im Makerspace aufgenommen. Dahin nehme ich meine Katze natürlich nicht mit hin.
Ich sag mal Grüsse aus Rheineck....da ich eine Galaxus Schachtel gesehen habe😊
Hey, 👋🏼 liebe Grüße zurück. Du kannst uns ja gerne mal im Makerspace besuchen kommen. www.makerspace.li
@@choschiba Hey Cool....wusste ich garnicht, also was ich im Video gesehen habe bei Dir hat es was mit Hilti bei Hilti zu tun😊🫡
Thank you so much god plese you
Thank you very much 😊
I love the concept bit too expensive tho
I‘m not doing this for a profit. It’s a different approach.
$795USD for the DIY mk2 kit?
Now that’s alittle crazy 🤣
Feel free to source all the parts by yourself. The machine is totally open source. For me it’s worth every penny.
@@choschiba wait I thought if I bought the full kit it would come with all the parts. I didn’t realize I’d have to 3-D print anything. I don’t even have a 3-D printer. I need to remind myself to not buy from you guys then if that’s the case where it doesn’t come with all the parts in the kit.
@@Rachelcenter1 why do you want to have a filament extruder when you don’t have a 3D printer to use the filament once you have produced it?
@@choschiba if I can teach myself how to make filament from recycles (successfully) then I can substantiate buying a 3d printer.
I’m buying milk at the grocery store at least once a week. I always take the #2 HDPE milk cartons to a recycle place afterwards. But I hear that these recycles are sent overseas and sometimes dumped into the ocean. So I would love to be able to recycle my #2 HDPE milk cartons into 3d printing filament. (Yes I've heard it's a material that is tough to print with). and then I can use the filament to print things for around the house. Here are the issues I'm running into:
CAN I BUY A MACHINE? I'm finding it difficult to find a reasonably priced pre-built 3d filament extruder machine on the internet that can handle HDPE. I tried reaching out to Fixtruder to ask if they sold a machine that could turn my milk cartons into 3d printing filament. I was told: "This issue has been discussed in the 3D printing community for a long time. This type of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) plastic shrinks a lot, does not stick to the table, clogs the nozzle, and due to the high shrinkage it has virtually no interlayer adhesion. The extrusion production method is universal. In principle, this can be done with our extruders. You will have to experiment because the properties of different plastics are not clear. You will need to dry it well and experiment with temperatures and cooling." So now I’m asking them to recommend a good machine that can handle this.
CAN I BUILD THE MACHINE? You'll come across websites like Precious Plastics that say here are the blueprints to make one of your own. So I start looking through the files and I don't know how to use CAD or do any of this stuff, so building my own might be tough. I tried watching a bunch of “DIY” youtube videos. Some of the videos made me realize that I’d have to buy a whole bunch of tools that I don’t know how to use to perform tasks like welding. (Tools that i’d probably never use again). Other videos didn’t include full blown step-by-step instructions. Some don’t even have a talking voice, just visuals that don't fully explain it in a way that caters to someone like me who doesn’t understand what they’re doing in the video. There were some videos with talking, but they flash a quick image on the screen of an electronics diagram and don’t go into full detail about how to build it. Is there a website I can go to, to get someone to build the machine for me?
CAN I USE SOMEONE ELSE'S MACHINE TO RECYCLE MY MILK CARTONS? I tried googling programs where I could turn in my plastic milk bottles to recycle companies in exchange for 3d printer filament. The closest I found was but I believe they only collect my filament waste, failed prints, supports and brims. I don't think they accept #2 HDPE milk jugs. I'm located in Georgia and I tried to use the Precious plastics map to see what was around me. I saw a recycling symbol in South Carolina which took me to the website of Anchor Shred & Recycle Co. I'm reading their website but I'm confused about what they can do to help me recycle my milk cartons into 3d printing filament.
Ok so I don't know how to build a machine, I don't see any reasonably priced machines to buy and I don't see any recycling places nearby that would exchange my milk cartons for 3d printing filament. Are there services out there that I'm not aware of, that could help me accomplish any of these tasks? Any help would be greatly appreciated. I'm new to the world of 3D printing filament.
@@choschiba
Great work 👍 , please give the review after using it .
Yes, I will. But first I want to work a bit more with it. So far it has worked really great. I‘ve already printed with the filament and works and looks absolutely nice!
The puller, winder speeds are not consistent. The biggest problem is not allowing the filament enough time to cool. Before take up. This causes problems with ovality. Especially with polycarbonate, and nylon. Great for show and tell. But definitely not for. Efficient production. If it works for you great. I say this with 24 years of extrusion experience.
What extrusion system are you using? I bet it’s at least 10x the price of what I am using here.
I have only ran industrial extruders Egan and Davis Standard for lamination molding to smaller medical extruders for medical tubing and silicone mandrel. I also have ran injection molding machines. Very interested in 3d printing and possible filament production on a smaller scale
It's a cool machine, but its output of 150 grams per hour makes you question the feasibility and risks. If it were possible to provide a productivity of 500 grams per hour, it would be much more promising.
You should discuss if it is technically possible to ramp it up. But I guess then the extruder would cost 10x more.
@@choschiba What prevents you from taking a larger diameter pipe and drill? Accordingly, the heater is more powerful. I think the price will be more reasonable.
@@nikphermer824 as I said, please ask Daniel Pfeifer, the owner of Artme3D personally.
That's 3.6kg per day, do you really need more ?