3D Printing Parts in Ultem™ 1010 Resin by SABIC - On Open Material 3D Printers

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • visionminer.com/materials#pei
    All about 3D Printing ULTEM™ 1010 on open-material 3D Printers!
    There still aren't many high-temp polymer printers out there -- but for the ones that can handle it, ULTEM™ is a wonder material. Extremely strong filament, rigid, and resistant to a plethora of chemicals, it can be used in automotive, aerospace, oil & gas, and even medical applications.
    Printed around 360-390ºC, it definitely requires special equipment -- not your standard consumer printer. The most affordable machine to print it, at least in early 2020, still seems to be the Funmat HT. All our machines are high-temp, so the SAAM HT, Funmat Pro 410, and AON M2 are also capable.
    Something you really want on your machine for ULTEM is a heated chamber -- the warping on this material is incredible, so for anything larger than a washer, having an actively heated chamber is required.
    Also available in a carbon-fiber blend: www.visionminer.com/materials
    At Vision Miner, we specialize in Functional 3D printing, especially high-performance plastics like PEEK, ULTEM, PPSU, PPS, CFPA, and more.
    If you're interested in using functional 3D printing and materials in your business, feel free to reach out, and we can help you make the right choice for your application.
    Call 833-774-6863 or email contact@visionminer.com, and we're here to help! At Vision Miner, we specialize in Functional 3D printing, especially high-performance plastics like PEEK, ULTEM, PPSU, PPS, CFPA, and more. We also have extensive experience with 3D scanners, and a whole array of solutions available for purchase. If you're interested in using functional 3D printing and materials in your business, feel free to reach out, and we can help you make the right choice for your application.
    Call 833-774-6863 or email contact@visionminer.com, and we're here to help!
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Комментарии • 38

  • @chicoxiba
    @chicoxiba 3 года назад +1

    u can't beat a candid report;

  • @el_mario_reus
    @el_mario_reus 3 года назад +1

    new subscriber in towm!!! all the way from spain :D

  • @AlexJoneses
    @AlexJoneses 4 года назад +2

    Ultem 9085 gang rise up

  • @JasonScottHamilton
    @JasonScottHamilton 4 года назад +1

    I’m curious that you recommend the Funmat HT, which has a max chamber temp of 90c but in the video you say you need a chamber that can hit 180c to really print it.

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад +1

      to print solid, thick parts you need 180C -- however, you can still do a lot with thin walls and certain geometries with a lower temp.

  • @Cyber_Cowboy
    @Cyber_Cowboy 4 года назад +1

    What would you recommend for someone that wants to print High-performance plastics with a end goal of printing Peek? Is there a type of filament that I can use that's a lot cheaper then Peek but would give me usable practice? Or should I just stick with PC as my most "exotic" filament? BTW I'm at the prosumer/ hobbyist level with an average budget. I do have a printer that on paper should be able to print Peek.

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад

      Pick up some ULTEM 1010, 9085, or PSU -- 1010 is about $100/500g, 9085 is easier but $125/500g, and PSU is about $90/500g -- you'll be AMAZED with the strength of all of them. Does your printer have a heated chamber?

    • @Cyber_Cowboy
      @Cyber_Cowboy 4 года назад

      @@VisionMinerit not heated yet. I built a stout metal enclosure with flame retarded inflation. I haven't worried about heating it until I have a reason. But I'm looking for a reason, lol

  • @twojay
    @twojay 4 года назад +3

    Would this material be suitable for something like custom vents on an automobile hood? The temperature resistance properties make it seem like a great option. Can it be sanded and painted? Or do you have another material suggestion for that type of application? Thanks!

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад +4

      Oh definitely -- EXCELLENT for automotive stuff, especially under the hood, and not just for the temperature -- it's super resistant to hydrocarbons and other fluids you find around cars :) And yes, it can even be sanded and painted!
      Carbon-fiber nylon is often a great choice under the hood as well, especially with the high-temp nylons coming out -- HTN -- usually a bit cheaper than ULTEM, and it'll get the job done :) The CF-Nylon in our store works excellent, for a great price! visionminer.com/materials :)

    • @twojay
      @twojay 4 года назад

      @@VisionMiner Awesome, that's exactly what I was hoping to hear. Thank you very much for the detailed and informative response.

    • @AlexJoneses
      @AlexJoneses 4 года назад

      Yes it can, but don't print something that big by yourself, go to a printing company (I work at one) and buy it from their printers. It's more expensive but it will work better and actually look good

    • @twojay
      @twojay 4 года назад

      @@AlexJoneses Thanks for the input. The vents are actually not very big and I had no problem printing the first few revisions on my CR-10S Pro. I had Stratasys print the final versions in the Ultem 1010 CG since I have no experience with the material and it requires a much fancier printer than what I have access to. As you mentioned, this route was not cheap but the vents seem to be holding up very well so far: ibb.co/WGDqJvZ

    • @AlexJoneses
      @AlexJoneses 4 года назад +2

      two jay oh that's good to hear, if you want an easy ultem printing experience by with the actual flame retardation properties (certified too), I highly recommend you print genuine ultem 9085. It's more easy to print than 1010, not as strong, but still stronger than every other plastic, and is really safe too.

  • @FusionSource
    @FusionSource 4 года назад +2

    Great video, love these awesome materials but won't be able to print them on my Ender 3, one day I will get a printer that can print these

  • @fidelisSeth
    @fidelisSeth 10 месяцев назад

    Is ULTEM made in uv resin for SLA printing?

  • @missingpunctuation
    @missingpunctuation 4 года назад +1

    Which of your printer/s do you normally print this on?

    • @harrywind1870
      @harrywind1870 4 года назад +1

      Also interested in this. Is the funmat ht sufficient of printing it properly?

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад

      All our printers are high-temp, so it's really "which printer is open" and whether or not we want support material, in which case we use the AON M2 or Funmat Pro 410

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад

      @@harrywind1870 Oh for sure -- you're just limited on size and thickness. At a certain thickness, the warping is too great, and it tears itself apart -- when the chamber is super-hot, like the AON or more, it's easier. At 90C on the funmat, though, you can still do some great stuff -- I think all the parts shown in the video were printed on the Funmat HT.

  • @josiahong5177
    @josiahong5177 Год назад +1

    How do you differentiate between fake ultem and real stuff? Is it temp resistance? Mechanical strength?

    • @elitewolverine
      @elitewolverine Год назад

      Probably print temp, if it don't say 370+ it's fake

    • @josiahong5177
      @josiahong5177 Год назад

      @@elitewolverine Huh. I got a spool that said it printed colder than that and tried extruding it at the temps given. Barely worked. actually was solid coming out of the nozzle.

    • @elitewolverine
      @elitewolverine Год назад

      @@josiahong5177 damn

  • @Davide-il3ou
    @Davide-il3ou 3 года назад

    Hey, is the ultem 1010 from imtansys a good quality product?

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  3 года назад

      We imagine so, but we don't carry their brand of filament. We have an excellent, USA-made source which we carry and have had great results with for years :)

  • @tylerprince9494
    @tylerprince9494 4 года назад +1

    Can you guys do a video on heat resident sla resin?

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  3 года назад

      One day soon we shall..... one day soon.... :)

  • @CodyBelcher
    @CodyBelcher 3 года назад +1

    How does PEI handle long term UV exposure?

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  3 года назад +1

      It's highly resistant to UV and gamma radiation -- used in space, it's quite good!

    • @EngineeringTechnikcom
      @EngineeringTechnikcom 3 года назад

      @@VisionMiner yes, not only in space proper, but on the moon too. in addition to the atomic oxygen/ UV polymer exposure tests on the ISS, PEI was found (accidentally) to have not only UV resistance, but high resistance to high energy particles from deep space such as cosmic rays etc.
      They found it when a sensor on the LADEE mission had lower than expected radiation exposure. Turned out there was an ULTEM seal that had inadvertently been shielding the sensor.

  • @Cyber_Cowboy
    @Cyber_Cowboy 4 года назад +1

    Is Peek recyclable? Or does it degrade considerably each time it's made back into filament? if that's even possible. If I could print the same 100 grams over and over to learn how to print Peek would be awesome.

    • @VisionMiner
      @VisionMiner  4 года назад +1

      Recyclable for sure, but if you're able to recycle it, you might as well just make filament with the pellets, they're much much cheaper than the filament.

  • @linuxinstalled
    @linuxinstalled 3 года назад

    Props to Cole for testing the car roll over test before sending out the benchy to Joel. Are there any more plans to have Cole on in the future?

  • @aristeidislykas7163
    @aristeidislykas7163 3 года назад

    Please keep the audio volume of the background music, to a minimum!