Oh you cheater you have a background in thisMike Hunter wrote:THANKS. Having the opportunity to draw from your experiences, as well as that of others, makes my transition to Additive Manufacturing much easier.
Mike H.
This years Valentines Gift
Re: This years Valentines Gift
Custom 3D printing for you or your business -- quote [at] pingring.org
- Mike Hunter
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Re: This years Valentines Gift
35 years in the Manufacturing industry making (for the most part) Medical Implants and Instrumentation. It does help with the transition, but "adding material" and "removing material" are two different beasts. My next quest ... getting the proper S3D parameters for those parts with "bridging".insta wrote:Oh you cheater you have a background in thisMike Hunter wrote:THANKS. Having the opportunity to draw from your experiences, as well as that of others, makes my transition to Additive Manufacturing much easier.
Mike H.
Mike H.
Continually learning and discovering.
Re: This years Valentines Gift
You will find a great deal of information on the internet regarding bridging, most of it contradictory. Bridge faster? Slower?
I've settled on a very slow bridging speed, 20 mm/s with 80% bridging extrusion multiplier works for me. If you do run some actual tests and come up with something better, I would love to know.
I've settled on a very slow bridging speed, 20 mm/s with 80% bridging extrusion multiplier works for me. If you do run some actual tests and come up with something better, I would love to know.
Re: This years Valentines Gift
No waste, no swarf! Well, unless you count support material.Mike Hunter wrote:It does help with the transition, but "adding material" and "removing material" are two different beasts.