PLA designed for annealing with minimal deformation: AzureFilm PLA Prime

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 51

  • @DonnyDonnMendoza
    @DonnyDonnMendoza Месяц назад +12

    Temperature results were insane (from a positive point of view). Great video Igor.

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage 29 дней назад +7

    Wow the temperature test was very impressive! Everything else is a bit surprising to me, but nothing crazy. I personally annealed some Inland PLA+ in a similar manner and it is temperature resistant enough to function as an oil cap in a hot engine bay.

  • @GMCRaptor
    @GMCRaptor 29 дней назад +4

    Love your videos Igor, I think it’s funny how you use your balcony and home as the lab, your neighbours must be scratching theirs heads. lol 👍🇦🇺

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +2

      Earlier I used a chain hoist, that was noisy to them (mostly on weekends). But, they don't know what am I doing :-)

    • @GMCRaptor
      @GMCRaptor 29 дней назад

      @@MyTechFun all in the name of science

  • @uhu4677
    @uhu4677 29 дней назад +3

    Wow, that impact resistence makes it an interesting PLA, even without annealing.

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith478 29 дней назад +5

    I think the holes in the side of the spools might also be helpful in filament drying although they'd also help with filament "wetting" from humidity. Maybe just putting removable, thin cardboard (poster board) circle cutouts on both sides would prevent wetting and could be removed for drying?

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +2

      Yes, it may be helpful for drying. But if you are able to print from dryer too, then it is not important (drying during unrolling)

  • @supercurioTube
    @supercurioTube 29 дней назад +2

    Thanks for testing this one, I'll keep it in mind for materials that can be printed easily, can handle very high temperatures and is very tough as well.
    The deformation during annealing looks significantly better than 3D870 PLA, which didn't match my expectations.

  • @BarnesysBuilds
    @BarnesysBuilds 29 дней назад +3

    The first company to come up with a high heat resistant PLA out of the box will win.

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +2

      There is one already, but not available worldwide. ruclips.net/video/uF2_ceBQ40Y/видео.htmlsi=RrHgJ0e2HzrZrcEG

    • @Dramaican88
      @Dramaican88 18 дней назад

      @@MyTechFun Also colorfabb has PLA HP that claims 135C HDT (method B). It would be great if you could test that one as well. And another interesting material is GreenTec from extrudr. One of the first to claim prints like PLA but has high heat resistance.

  • @AwestrikeFearofGods
    @AwestrikeFearofGods 29 дней назад +6

    According to their SDS, this material is less than 80% PLA. I'd like to know what their proprietary additive is. For engineering applications, it can be important information (e.g. for chemical compatibility).

    • @riba2233
      @riba2233 29 дней назад +1

      Makes sense that it is heavily doped, has plenty of results far from regular pla.

  • @jcugnoni
    @jcugnoni 29 дней назад +1

    Very interesting material to be honest. It is quite different from what can usually expected from PLA. Thanks for your thorough reviews !

  • @avalanchecarter
    @avalanchecarter 28 дней назад

    I appreciate that you use a consistent testing methods and share the actual results with us instead of just summarizing. I am curious how you calibrate the new hammer test machine from eBay.

  • @drkzilla
    @drkzilla 28 дней назад

    I'm excited for the abs

  • @DeVerm123
    @DeVerm123 29 дней назад +4

    Hi Igor, I wonder if you could test compression strength, i.e. opposite of tensile strength, for materials like ABS, ASA, PC, TPU etc.

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +1

      Something what I am working exactly now (washer test). But I need more time, since many filaments will be included (all Polylite, Bambu filaments, 4 TPU etc.)

    • @DeVerm123
      @DeVerm123 28 дней назад

      at would be great! I am thinking of using collars printed from TPU as a buffer where it will experience hundreds of kilos compression force… will TPU just squeeze out or will it work beautifully 🙂

  • @chatroux399
    @chatroux399 29 дней назад +1

    Interesting results, really close to ingeo 3d870 pellets but I don't understand why they ask to preheat the hoven, it is really strange

  • @riba2233
    @riba2233 29 дней назад +2

    Another great test, thanks! Interesting material, bit weak in tensile but good in impact and creep. Would you maybe compare it to the volcano pla that promises similar properties?
    Btw some of their marketing claims are dubious (improved both bending and stiffness?)

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад

      Volcano PLA? Anybody tested it? I would test it only of it don't deform. Earlier I annealed a similar material, but it deforms a lot. CF-PLA would be good for this, but current trend on YT is that "CF will kill you".. And about this PLA, I was thinking, why they suggest to put it in preheated oven(?) More logical would be slow heating and cooling.

    • @riba2233
      @riba2233 29 дней назад

      @@MyTechFun yes, cnc kitchen included it is his annealing vide0 and it didn't deform. It can also be printed really fast as a bonus.
      Idk, maybe to control the annealing process better

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +2

      A, its Formfutura Volcano PLA. I already contacted them, but they are not interested in this "cooperation". So I will just order few rolls myself.. I am curious about it. Thx.

    • @riba2233
      @riba2233 29 дней назад

      @@MyTechFun awesome, you are such a legend 😁

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +1

      @@riba2233 Thx 🙂By the way, where are you from?

  • @oldman1944
    @oldman1944 29 дней назад

    Great tests as usual. I wonder if you would get less warping during annealing if the flat sections weren't laying on a silicone sheet. The sheet would have caused uneven heating.

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +1

      Recently I had some discussion about this. But probably slower heating would be better, not placing objects into preheated oven. But this was the instruction on their website.

  • @dekurvajo
    @dekurvajo 29 дней назад +1

    I just realized we always talk about annealing PLA. How about other non exotic materials? Like PETG or ABS?

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +1

      According to many others, they cannot be annealed (PETG, ABS). So, I didn't even try (but I wanted to). Except Nylon, it can benefit from annealing, it will reduce the creeping of PA.

    • @riba2233
      @riba2233 29 дней назад +1

      @@dekurvajo annealing only matters for crystalline materials.

    • @dekurvajo
      @dekurvajo 29 дней назад

      @@MyTechFun yes i was hasty with my comment. Right after i just made my research, and got the same answer you just confirmed. Thank you!

  • @Collective_Judas
    @Collective_Judas 29 дней назад

    I have a suggestion/something to check for you.
    While playing around with PLA annealing, I discovered that you can do it by throwing the prints into boiling water.
    So could you check how this method of annealing affects the properties of the material in relation to heating in the oven?
    The temperature of the process is actually lower, but the process itself is much faster.

    • @TNX255
      @TNX255 27 дней назад

      Boiling would most certainly impregnate the plastic with lots of moisture, and isn't that what we don't want in our parts?

    • @Collective_Judas
      @Collective_Judas 27 дней назад

      @@TNX255 I don't know if it's such a big problem, moisture bothers us if it's in the filament, but in the final product it's only a matter of time.
      That's why it would be nice if it was verified.

  • @achillesmjb
    @achillesmjb 29 дней назад

    I'm curious. Which is your favorite printer?

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад

      I think this video will answer your question: ruclips.net/video/D6mOrmfkTxg/видео.html

  • @pkchutrainer
    @pkchutrainer 29 дней назад

    I just tried the spreadsheet link and there's a 404 error

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад

      Fixed, you can download it now. Thx for informing me. www.mytechfun.com/video/389

  • @berlinberlin4246
    @berlinberlin4246 Месяц назад

    How is the temperature results compared to normal PLA?
    (Or have i missed it in the video?9

    • @DonnyDonnMendoza
      @DonnyDonnMendoza Месяц назад +1

      the temperature results are in the video. definitely worth watching the full video

  • @alexey_sychev
    @alexey_sychev 29 дней назад

    Thanks for testing. Marketing gimmick as expected

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад

      It has some advantages, but yes, it is not perfect. Imagine a person, who don't have enclosed printer or just don't want ABS, ASA fumes, but he wants to print a gopro holder for his car. PLA, PETG would deform from summer heat. This may be a solution.

  • @xCopyCatz
    @xCopyCatz 29 дней назад +2

    I think it's the testing method, you are focusing too much on the testing terminology rather than letting us know what practical usages that it can do based on those test. From i can see and understand from your video is just oh this material can do this and that. This is the specs of the material and this is what it does. Tbh , its getting abit boring for me. Just my honest opinion, maybe the testing methodology can change towards something else less explored.

    • @MyTechFun
      @MyTechFun  29 дней назад +9

      Hm, I get the point. This methodology is good for mechanical parts, it is used in mechanical engineering very often. The users has to recognise what stress types he have in his applications. But, yes, I could include more practical examples, where some filament would be good for and where not. Thx for suggestion.