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https://www.youtube.com/@3dtvb... But no idea how hot it needs to be.
All right - here's the secret sauce. Some of it is geometry, some of it is viscosity, some of it is resin. Start with geometry - imagine a 5mm thick "wall" that you want to bore a small hole through. Good luck with that. How about the same sized hole though a 1/2 mm thick "wall"? Yes, please! The concept of thin geometry between gaps helps for a lot of things. Thinner walls allow your resin to slide off between layers as opposed to pooling on a "shelf". Now combine that concept with viscosity and you'll realize that you want a runnier resin (warm) versus thick (cold) to facilitate that runoff. Here is an illustration of how you can achieve a thin wall for your hole within a thick wall.Front side - same dimensions visible for both objects - - the left one will have a "saggy" hole: (Attachment Link) Back side - you did some magic on one to thin out that wall where it matters: (Attachment Link) When I build a model I think of what's visible to the modeller, and what's hidden from the modeller. It's in the hidden areas that you do stuff like this to manipulate the physics without interrupting the outside visual goal.For your bearings, since it's already presumably a conical shape you may have better luck working the viscosity angle. Try warming up your resin so it's nice and runny and see if that helps improve it?Anyway, this is stuff that works for me. I still encounter issues where the resin does something funky and then I have to figure out how to work around it but I'm having less and less issues now days. I hope this is helpful.Cheers -Mike