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...The main point here is the toothpaste which acts as the polisher agent.
Cheaper than injection tooling, absolutely--and indeed, that's exactly why RP exists, not as a means of production. Cheaper than resin casting? I'm not so sure about that. For resin, all you need is one good master, which can be produced using any number of different traditional or non-traditional techniques--or any combination thereof--selected for best results as well as cost-effectiveness, then pay a fraction of the cost for each piece produced. Whereas for RP, you pay full price for every single piece you order, with zero cost savings for mass production.
A friend of mine came up with a brilliant way to remove the "fuzzy" texture on these models that the solvent just wont remove. Take an old toothbrush and a dab of toothpaste and lightly scrub. I am guessing that the flat sides of that hopper would clean up well using this method, where a file or sand paper would risk taking off the detail. It's not that the model itself is rough necessarily, it just needs to be cleaned. I used a toothbrush and toothpaste on a couple truck frames and it works really well. I still have a little cleaning to do around the nooks and crannies, but this is after about 60 seconds of light scrubbing. I agree with several of you guys in the hope that 3d printing will continue to evolve. It's not perfect now, but the current quality is such that I am not hesitating at all making more models. HuskerN
So Colgate or Crest? I gotta try this.
Woops, my mind was back-dating a bit there. I was thinking resin-casting using machine-milled molds. For the average-joe's silicone mold, it is cheaper except, perhaps in the most extreme cases.-Cody F. abut I don't
If it is, then this opens up the field to many more options.
Cody,I think that I go back a bit further back than you but I don't recall any poured resin models using anything but some sort rubber molds. To satisfy my curiosity, could you provide any examples of resin cast models which were made in machine-milled molds?
I'll have to give the non-acetone remover a try as well.
What might that be?
I would provide photos if I could. The only one I know of (as in: that i have seen for myself) is an N scale Police Box that is of the type used for the TARDIS for the early doctors of Doctor Who. When you look at it, it doesn't show any difference from something cast in a rubber mold. It is just white/cream resin, and being such the casting is a bit crude, but it is mostly due to it being old (over 20 years old) and temperature changes of two different basements having taken its toll on it.
And you do go back further than me, physically. But figuratively, i'm quite old (over 80), but I haven't bothered to figure out exactly how old.-Cody F.