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Especially when that way sucks.
I suppose I should have been more clear (no pun intended): the surface will naturally be white, owing to the method of depositing the material; in the same way that clear glass can have a frosted surface. If the surface of the RP material was polished, it would likely tend to be clear, but the method used to build the model will always leave a fine-grained irregular surface. Hope that makes more sense.
Agreed. Heptane doesn't attack the resin in any way. Simply soaking the item in heptane will dissolve the wax.
But how are we *sure* it's not affecting the resin? Because it's not dissolving into goo? Why can't it be affecting the structure of the material without actually making it all disappear?
Anyone try WD40? I don't have any big pieces to try it on but did test on some building details I had made and it looks pretty good.Also, has anyone tried sand/media blasting? Jason
I personally feel that solvents are too aggressive for something that can be removed with heat. I can put a part in hot water and then scrub with detergent and get something that's clean but still somewhat transparent.Anyone who's removed candle wax from carpet with a shopping bag and an iron can understand where I'm coming from. There could very well be other ways that we haven't though of yet that could yield better results. And I would love it if you guys didn't have the tail wag the dog on this and see what she can come up with.Jason
If the surface of the part is not frosty white, I will bet my bottom dollar you have not removed all of the wax.
DKS, If the resin material was normally white in color then it should appear white with or without the wax coating on it. If the wax makes the object look transparent it is because the resin itself is transparent (not white). The surface roughness (which scatters light rays) makes the resin appear to be white. Again, I am talking about the RP pieces I own (which were not rendered in FUD by Shapeways). Those might be different than FUD because I can't melt the resin with any solvents I mentioned in my previous post here. Some of the descriptions of FUD on this thread seem to imply that it is acrylic (which would be easily dissolved by Methylene Chloride).I'll see if I can take a photo of the White Tower burger building showing the clear parts of the building.Another sure way to determine if the resin is clear is to take a solid piece of the printed object and sand and polish it. If it becomes transparent then the resin is transparent. But that will ruin the item. For me the stipulation that the resin is transparent because is looks transparent with a coat of wax on it is good enough to convince me that the resin is in fact transparent.
Where does this question lead? Is anybody complaining that the items dunked in heptane have become brittle, changed or unusable in some way?