Nice to see that people are now recognizing that temperature and resin viscosity are a major factor is resin printing issues. Sadly, Chitu don't sell via Amazon Australia which they need to consider as we certainly need the option of purchasing them in Australia. Great video and nicely presented.
Aliexpress is our friend in Australia We also don't have the shipping delays that North America is subject to (1-2 weeks for most of my orders), nor do we have the high shipping cost ordering direct from Asia.
ime a 60 year old and can one 100% say the biggest problem is people wanting to print at a 100mph so let your printer do its job trying to push it to far it will rebel i started with the old ANET A8 12 years ago ive had a ender 3 pro for past 5 years just bought the Halot marge 8k ressin its still boxed as buying the extras ie cleaning stastion just bought the heater fan deliverd to day its a waiting game that in the end saves on fustrasion and money . on fdm printetr just use low line print and deal with extra print time hrs as it will save pro print prep time this is just my advice. only just came across this channle and can only give this guy my 100% utter respect for just plain to the point advise and instruction well done mate
So I want to see a Canadian winter 3d printer demo like -40c and fluctuating temps…. I can’t put a resin printer in my house due to no ventilation where I could set one up… my garage would work but only during the summer .. If the heater helps that level of cold than I could get into 3d printing ❤
Great vide! I'll be moving my printers to the garage and using this to heat the resin. I agree that this next gen of printers will focus on heated vats, along with connectivity, but this will help me get by in the interim
Very interesting! I've been wanting to get a resin printer for a while now, but have been concerned about the fumes of it in my office, so I thought about making a "workshop" (probably just a reasonably insolated shed), but winters here can be HARSH averaging 20 degrees or lower, so I'd probably get a space heater for winters, but that doesn't feel like enough... this could definitely be the answer to that! Very well made video btw!
Thank you! I think this is made for people in your situation. I tried a space heater as well, but it wasn't enough to heat the garage properly. Too many drafts from outside.
About the rubber around the lid: aren’t you supposed to leave a little gap for the heater/controller cable to exit under the lid, and by doing so, the lid will sit flat on the base of the printer?
I think that can work initially, but my concern would be the resin cooling down over time. Right now, the temperature of my resin is 53 degrees without the heater. It would warm up a little during printing, but I doubt it will be warm enough to reach its optimal temperature in a cold environment.
Why on earth would you put your 3D printers in a garage, when you have a warm house where they're SUPPOSED to be? I swear, you people on the internet freaking out about 3D printer fumes are loosing your gahdamn minds. LMAO IT'S FINE!
Nice to see that people are now recognizing that temperature and resin viscosity are a major factor is resin printing issues. Sadly, Chitu don't sell via Amazon Australia which they need to consider as we certainly need the option of purchasing them in Australia. Great video and nicely presented.
Aliexpress is our friend in Australia
We also don't have the shipping delays that North America is subject to (1-2 weeks for most of my orders), nor do we have the high shipping cost ordering direct from Asia.
ime a 60 year old and can one 100% say the biggest problem is people wanting to print at a 100mph so let your printer do its job trying to push it to far it will rebel i started with the old ANET A8 12 years ago ive had a ender 3 pro for past 5 years just bought the Halot marge 8k ressin its still boxed as buying the extras ie cleaning stastion just bought the heater fan deliverd to day its a waiting game that in the end saves on fustrasion and money . on fdm printetr just use low line print and deal with extra print time hrs as it will save pro print prep time this is just my advice. only just came across this channle and can only give this guy my 100% utter respect for just plain to the point advise and instruction well done mate
So I want to see a Canadian winter 3d printer demo like -40c and fluctuating temps…. I can’t put a resin printer in my house due to no ventilation where I could set one up… my garage would work but only during the summer ..
If the heater helps that level of cold than I could get into 3d printing ❤
You can get yourself a enclosure with a ventilation system. Make a cover for the window and run the ventilation line to the outside
Great demonstration. Thank you!
My pleasure!
Mine arrived today got it for $53 with free shipping your video was very helpful and will be setting mine up at the weekend.
Awesome!
Whats the power consumption? Thanks
Great vide! I'll be moving my printers to the garage and using this to heat the resin.
I agree that this next gen of printers will focus on heated vats, along with connectivity, but this will help me get by in the interim
Awesome review
Very interesting! I've been wanting to get a resin printer for a while now, but have been concerned about the fumes of it in my office, so I thought about making a "workshop" (probably just a reasonably insolated shed), but winters here can be HARSH averaging 20 degrees or lower, so I'd probably get a space heater for winters, but that doesn't feel like enough... this could definitely be the answer to that!
Very well made video btw!
Thank you! I think this is made for people in your situation. I tried a space heater as well, but it wasn't enough to heat the garage properly. Too many drafts from outside.
Wished you dropped a probe thermometer in the resin to get the actual temp of the resin.
Could you please check how many watts does the heater uses? Thank you
informative video, i've subscribed. More lighting would be great :)
I like my thermalvatband its a plug and play, I dont even know its there half of the time.
That's a neat product! I haven't seen that before.
About the rubber around the lid: aren’t you supposed to leave a little gap for the heater/controller cable to exit under the lid, and by doing so, the lid will sit flat on the base of the printer?
Yeah, that's the correct way to do it.
Is it normal the heater stays on when plugged in ? Even if you do not want to use it ?
Yeah. I just pull the plug apart when I'm not using it.
How do you deal with toxic particles from the resin?
I made another video talking about that in different ways. ruclips.net/video/4XQIbGScJKA/видео.html
Does it come with multiple magnets? I want the ability to move it from printer to printer.
No just the one but they look pretty standard, like the ones you canget for a phone holder in your car
It only comes with 1 magnet.
Sous Vide cooker works amazing btw.
Do you lower it into the resin like you would with water, or does it just hover above the vat?
@@FigureFeedback yep, I actually dismantled one I has laying around so the heating element would fit in the vat
What if you warm up the resin with a heat gun?
I think that can work initially, but my concern would be the resin cooling down over time. Right now, the temperature of my resin is 53 degrees without the heater. It would warm up a little during printing, but I doubt it will be warm enough to reach its optimal temperature in a cold environment.
I just bought one.
Enjoy it!
Could you please tell me whats the power consumption? Thanks
@@BADGOY-45i will check and get back with you on that. I have not set it up yet.
Would this work with the photon mono 2?
I'd imagine it will since that printer is just an upgraded version of the one I use in this video.
Why on earth would you put your 3D printers in a garage, when you have a warm house where they're SUPPOSED to be? I swear, you people on the internet freaking out about 3D printer fumes are loosing your gahdamn minds. LMAO IT'S FINE!
Why would you want to smell fumes of any kind if you have the option not to?
Also the fumes are toxic
@@fynnpeters2844 No, they are not.
Fumes are absolutely toxic and produce rushes on people skin, you are not documented at all
@@selicatoart3362 Read the MSDS you dolt. It absolutely is NOT.