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Most aquarium heaters have a safety to shut off when there is no water.
Since I print in the garage I've been heating my vat/resin prior to printing and it helps a lot with the viscosity issues.
...white paper from Formlabs about curing resin and they find that the strength is increased...
Do you have a link? I read a similar paper (that I can no longer find) which I understood the conclusion was that temperature had little to no affect on the prints end strength. Just that higher temperature greatly reduced the necessary layer cure time, resulting in faster prints. It didn't consider effects on details though.
I wonder how much this would actually be helping? By the time your print gets past supports and to the actual part, temperature of the vat will almost certainly have reached thermal equilibrium with the rest of the garage. A heat lamp might work to provide a constant, even source of heat, but I'd want to make sure they don't put off any UV themselves. Usually they are more on the IR side of things though.Another option is a "Lens Warmer". Manufacturered warmers are wrapped around a lens body and meant to keep the camera lens above freezing during long outdoor cold weather shoots to prevent fog and condensation. They probably wont provide enough power to heat a resin vat to the 70-80 F range, but surely the smart minds here could design a high-output type warmer! I believe they're essentially just a string of resistors. That raises the question of diminishing returns though, the power required to get such a circuit to output a consistent 70-80 degrees, wrapped around the vat for hours on end, might be more than it's worth.
Another option is a "Lens Warmer". Manufacturered warmers are wrapped around a lens body and meant to keep the camera lens above freezing during long outdoor cold weather shoots to prevent fog and condensation. They probably wont provide enough power to heat a resin vat to the 70-80 F range, but surely the smart minds here could design a high-output type warmer! I believe they're essentially just a string of resistors. That raises the question of diminishing returns though, the power required to get such a circuit to output a consistent 70-80 degrees, wrapped around the vat for hours on end, might be more than it's worth.
I searched "triangles" on the Facebooks and found a post were they said you can use a Photon validator and take the slice with the triangles out and fix in MS Paint, the replace it.
I figured it was the slicer since I would get different results with the same model.So for my HOn30 empire I just got a brass Climax loco. The pilots are pretty weak looks wise and the is a huge L tongue hanging out to screw a coupler to. So I just 3D printed all new pilots that will hod a 1015 coupler.Has anyone here used the castable resin and made 3D brass parts? If so how do you do it?