![]() |
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Interesting. I am curious to know how long it takes to print this wheel. Did you use one of the OpenSCAD parametric wheel programs available or is this your design? Any chance of sharing the STL?
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
2 Attachment(s)
Quote:
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
I know what I'm doing all night.
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Looking at it right now, looks like something messed up during the print
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
There was a team at North Star last year that used 3D printed wheels... I think it was 2175. They had a sponsor print them with material stronger than what you typically get for home printers, if I remember right. You should get in touch with them and see how their experience went over the season!
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
Was something wrong with YouTube that made you put the video on this site? |
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
We recently printed a pulley for our (Very Altered) KOP drive train to replace a lost one. We printed it with PLA at only 55% fill. I was worried that we did not do 100% infill, but its working fine with all the abuse the freshmen and I have put on it.
When we started experimenting with our printer i was surprised at how strong pieces can be if build correctly. I guess if a wheel breaks its as easy as printing a new one overnight. If you were to go to competition with printed wheels, make sure you bring extra. |
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Printer is now making a squeaking noise too. I'd go check on it if I were you.
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Well, that blows. Looks like I'll be contacting MakerBot support.
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
230 C is on the hot side for PLA. I am typically printing around 195 C. If it get's too hot it can burn and cause jams in the head as well. 230C is in the ABS material range.
If you need a hot layer to stick, set your slicer to put the first two layers down hot, then have it dial the temp back to what will still flow well at a lower temp. Or under your printer control you can pull the temp back as it is running unless the g-code has a temp setting at every layer. For a stronger material nylon can be extruded as well, but requires a pretty hot temp to do so. Not all printers are up to that level of heat. Randy |
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
|
Re: 3D Printing A Wheel
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:48. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi