0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Go down to 2 seconds on the normal exposure time. You can probably go lower, between 2 seconds and 1.5 seconds. If the supports need to be fixed, then fix them as their own issue. And for the resolution you're striving for the Siryatech Fast resin will probably not get it. It will be close but not quite. Also, in light of the repeated difficulties that you've been having why not just try some of the suggestions that these guys have been offering. Try positioning vertical with just the ends removed and printed separately as @bbussey has described, utilizing the membrane idea that he showed being used so successfully with sides, roof, and floor in place. If I was in the spot you've been in that would be exactly what my next effort would be. And at two seconds normal time and .051 layer height. Also, just in case, make sure you shake the daylights out of your resin before to pour it and thoroughly stir any resin that's been sitting in the vat. Think of it as a reset and then work from there.
Yes I can print whatever I want, whenever I want for me, but handing off an imperfect solution to customers whether I print on demand, or send them a file to print themselves, can have a negative effect on my brand, which I am trying to avoid.
Also, Shapeways FXD was not perfect fit-wise. You’re at the mercy of how well the printer calibration is maintained, both with the “fuzzies” on faces against the wax supports and in dimensions. They can change over a matter of days, let alone between two different ProJet printers. I’d rather deal with redesigning the support structure of an SLA model and having all visible surface detail crisp than splitting FXD models into multiple components in order to have all the visible model surfaces face-up. There’s also the issue of seeing visible of the printer head path on the “smooth” surfaces of FXD parts regardless of orientation, that doesn’t occur with SLA, and sometimes the printing path artifacts are more prominent. Again, when the printer requires calibration. FXD was good for parts with a lot or detail and relief, such as the truck sideframes on the EP3. But not so good on flat non-relief detail such as the sides of the modern White Tower building (which I’m also itching to print in SLA).
I am asking this question because I cannot get the Siraya Fast to print good detail no matter my efforts (exposure time, etc.)
This has not been the case for me, once some minor cleaning/deburring is complete my designs assemble flawlessly. My 3768 kit is a very complex example of this.
You used to complain all the time about the scale of Shapeways FXD parts not being consistent, and how they would not match against etched parts from print to print. The Stillwell coaches come to immediate mind. Yes, if you're printing all the components at once and you have them similarly orientated in the STL, they will fit. But they won't be consistent across multiple prints. The SLA parts are consistent. A component from the first print will match up with a component from the tenth print. This is night and day as far as I'm concerned. In just the last two months of experimenting, I've been able to print models cleanly that I never could get to render well enough via Shapeways. I was working with ProJet contractors before printing at Shapeways, and at least they cared about keeping the machines in register. But we had to print 10mm cubes every so often to get the XYZ measurements so the tolerance could be compensated for in the STLs.It would be impossible to render the reduction gear payload cleanly on a properly-calibrated and maintained ProJet, let alone though Shapeways. It was a huge endeavor just to get the Low Side Gondola parts to render properly, and that was with them taking extra care to render the parts because it was a large order.
For all of the praise of resin printers here on this forum, I have spent 10x the amount of design time designing supports, failed prints, and cleaning off sprues and supports than I would have sent simply sanding the fuzz off of FUD, and having PERFECT fits the first time, in addition to never having to handle nasty chemicals. Yes I can print whatever I want, whenever I want for me, but handing off an imperfect solution to customers whether I print on demand, or send them a file to print themselves, can have a negative effect on my brand, which I am trying to avoid.
No doubt there are, but the majority are for personal use and not intended to be commercialized. And that's fine. My comments are that it takes just as long to design and iterate and remove sprues, etc. as it does to manage a FUD model.
I can complain all I want- it's my thread and all I really wanted was folks' favorite resin 9which was answered long ago. I am just stating the obvious. Maybe iterating designs and removing supports is fun to some, but it will become tedious over time. It is what it is.