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I have asked the designer if the shell is available in another medium like FXD OR ABS. If the printing vats are smaller for those maybe that would result in a cleaner print.Doug
I think the shell that looks the best was indeed printed with it standing on end. If I could be sure that it would be done that way again, I'd order a new one. Unfortunately, from what I'm hearing, that may not be the case. I sent the designer those photos and I'll wait to see what he thinks.Doug
Doug your "good" example looks as good as the Kato RDCs (at least it does in that photo). The "bad" example looks like what I normally expect to see from a FUD-printed items.I don't think there is a printer out there within reach of a hobbyist (price-wise) which would be able to print with the quality and resolution you are seeking.@Lemosteam John, you mentioned a vat. I think ProJet printers used for FUD and FXD printing don't print the parts in a vat of liquid resin. They work like ink jet printers, squirting resin or wax as needed from the their print-heads. I found a video whcih as short snippets of the printing process. Looks like the resin might be cured by UV light but not in a vat.That video is on this web page.
It is frustrating that the ability of designers to render outstanding 3D models has grown much faster than the ability to 3D print them.
...They could have placed 20 parts above your shell requiring wax along the side of your model all the way up to the top...
Just want to point out the myth in this. Despite the name, 'Rapid prototyping'(3D printing) is quite a time consuming process. It takes a machine several minutes per layer, just for a tray/vat size of a a few square inches. For FXD, each of those layers is just 16 microns, or 6/10,000ths of an inch. The amount of material, and more importantly, the amount of time it would consume to print a vertical buffer between different items is just not economical. Instead, they'll group items from their product queue by height. So even if the machine can print 100mm vertically, it's much faster/cheaper to print 3 runs of various items grouped in 10, 14, and 8mm high trays than one run of a 34mm + 2 vertical buffers.
Someone showed me a 3D printed O scale window frame and tankcar dome with no banding and it was a slightly flexible material. Almost like nylon. All I heard was he got $1000 off for buying a used machine with little run time.It used liquid resin that hardened with a laser. A liter of resin was $110.