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This makes for interesting reading: http://3dhomemade.blogspot.com/
Some of this stem from the orientation issue Bryan has encountered. However, there are other problems that are related to the cleaning process, which they try to accelerate by heating the objects to melt the wax--which unfortunately is only a few degrees below the melting point of the FUD. I sometimes wish that we could order the products "raw" or uncleaned; I'd clean them myself using heptane, which dissolves the wax thoroughly but does not affect the FUD in any way.
David,The FUD wax issue has come up in the 1/4800 naval Yahoo forum as well. Any details as to how one removes wax with heptane, where one obtains it, and any health precautions you would use?Thanks in advance,Mark H.
When I spoke to Mark (M4D) a month or so ago, he wasn't real interested in any new master work. I think the continued weak US dollar is mostly responsible for this.I did get a little bit of interest upon suggesting some EMD short hoods (especially with Espee light packages) to compliment the existing long hoods.I had (much) earlier inquired about design and masters for a container project and was looking at about $1k from start to finish, including 3 masters to cast from. I assume the design process was a fair amount of the cost. It would have made at least Gary Hinshaw and DRD happy
The price is more than a little bit higher. It is an option for masters that are designed to be used for resin castings, but it isn't an option for direct-purchase by consumers. And it's much more difficult to remove the support structure, which is the same material as the item itself. There are issues unique to each process that have to be addressed. This EL-C shell, for example, still has stepping issues on the slopes as well as distortion issues in the cab area and soft-relief issues in other areas.
I'm a Solidworks fan. Bryan is too. Robb probably still uses Inventor. DKS might be using Google Sketch-up for the 3D stuff? The Google program is priced right, if you want to try something out. If you want to be "in-the-business" Solidworks is fantastic.
Apologies Mark - didn't mean to misquote you or confuse the subject further.I just wish I had time to (learn how to) design things myself. I'm looking forward to working on your shells... and would love some short hoods to go with them
Time...bit of a precious commodity these days!
Bryan,If I am not mistaken that ELC was built around 6.5 years ago; shortly after I took delivery of the machine. Things have moved on since then. For the last 6 years we have been using Materialise Magics support generation software. Supports can be removed (almost!) as easily as tearing the perforations on postage stamps. Most , if not all of the distortion issues have been addressed by a combination of better understanding of exposure time/intensity and ease of adding the appropriate supports. Having said that the advantage of the Shapeways process from the POV of the machine operator is that the supports are continuous and need no user skill to place. Having said that I wish you the best with Best Cast - my engineering clients have largely priced me out of the model RR market - and that's a good thing