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THAT looks like we're already there. I don't see any layer lines...and neither does the close-up shot.EXCELLENT!Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
Man you guys are a tough audience! OK I thought to compare apples to apples I put a light coat of Tamiya primer on it. Took the picture with my wifes phone which has a much better camera, at a similar angle. Lighting is a little dark on the smoke box front. The boiler is almost exactly 0.5 inches across. The whole boiler looks like this, nary a line to be seen. Proof is in the pudding so to speak... (Attachment Link) Mike
I think the point here is that there will always be layer lines in resin 3D printing, and you'll be able to perceive them when you enlarge a sharp photo of your model by 500 to 1750%...or beyond.But, from a practical standpoint...and from a standpoint of "normal" human eye visual acuity, layer lines like on Mike's print are practically invisible, especially after painting & weathering.
I have plenty photos that you can barely see any lines:Just posted the last pic to say if you look close enough (closer than eyes?) there are lines.Certain parts may achieve injection plastic levels. But until they fix the FEP tension on different surfaces we got a long way to go. I think it could be done with software that can see a thick area of a model right next to a thin area. Split those layers into 2 exposures that mask out the parts needed so that in whole the exposure it even.
Sorry Chris, side of cylinder, from the centerline down.
Everyone always takes my commentary as personal criticism of their work. It's not, and yes I can still make out layer lines in all of your images so far. It is merely stating facts regarding the fallacy of replacing a highly polished mold, with a process tech riddled with potential error states that can occur, no matter what the user attempts, particularly where repeatability is concerned. I also realize most folks are not using this as a manufacturing process, save for nebulous items like detail parts for scenery (in the MRR world anyway).I have always agreed that there is a point of diminishing returns for this tech. The smaller the voxel, the more time is involved. The more time you have to print, the higher the possibility of other error states to occur. Secondly Robert, all of the various natural things you mention are inherently, and naturally round or round-ish, even a fiber is typically a round cross section that tapers at each end of its length, lending to the natural curvature and smoothness of the things we see and touch every day (ignoring the microscopic).Voxels, even rounded on the hard corners via anti-aliasing, etc., are unnatural in that sense, hence the reason we can see and feel the edges, under magnification or not. I also think that viscosity of the resin comes into play, filling valleys that cannot be completely cleaned and remaining after the curing process (a good thing to some extent).Layered SLA depends on three things. The accuracy of the light "edges" and why I think DLP helps, the layer height accuracy of the machine (and to Robert's point even the 18 micron nominal will have a tolerance range on it of +/- ? microns), and the STABILTY of the object being printed, the most commonly ignored and difficult to control error state.The taller the print, the more stability is a factor in layer lines and I think this is why many folks try to print flat or with curved shapes parallel to X-Y plane.Evidence of this is present, obvious to me, in the last image. Again, YES I think this looks awesome compared to other attempts I have seen and as Robert points out much closer to the human eye perspective, so don't get offended'.These are clearly lines representing the angle at which the boiler was printed, and guessing that the smokebox was the last portion to print.Would also love to see your model where the supports were removed and how clean that area is (pink elephant in the room, also not a criticism, which I know is COMPLETELY out of anyone's control). (Attachment Link)
All of these points are valid, as are mine. There is no difference of opinion here. Everyone here knows I support the value of any type of 3D printing.These novices who might read these posts must also realize that this is NOT a rigid science or a simple math equation. It is more of a witchcraft, and some users are better at honing the process than others. There are so many variables that can negatively affect a print, that many just give up. Facebook groups are teeming with folks that are so frustrated trying to perfect a process that has moving targets. Room temp, resin temp, resin viscosity, Fep material, leveling, leakage, cleaning and curing methods, and I won’t even manti9n the miryiad of slicer settings, etc., etc. I’ve seen posts of people running print farms like “I’ve been printing this same file on three machines for five months straight.” , all things the same, no matenance changes or issues, and one of the three machines gets a delamination issue, or total goop fail, or won’t stick to the plate, etc.3D printing has got to have the worst repeatability numbers ever, just due to the number of potential failure modes. I wonder what the failure probability would be, @GaryHinshaw after taking ALL of the variables into account.It’s much like a perfect golf swing, you have it or you don’t. @Peachymike , I would suggest that you have it. I don’t. I go to bed with a print running and I pray all night that I will wake up to a decent, not even perfect, print, and not something that I have to peel off the FEP.This is NOT an easy or trouble free process, I.e. “just do this”, or “just do that” is almost never the answer. Machine to machine, resin to resin, environment to environment, person to person, the probability of failure is very high. I know my posts about resin printing sound bleak, but I feel that folks should also know all of the benefits and warts together. What I find really amusing is that that other printing house gets blasted for their product output and surface quality all the time, no no one likes to show or admit to resin printing flaws that are in many cases worse, especially when one takes into account support removal and the resulting surface that it leaves.@Peachymike , may I ask you how many tries it too to get that model to print that well. I am not being sarcastic here, but genuinely curious. I have one model that it took four vat-fulls of resin to get a reasonably satisfactory result. It To each person, every tool has its purpose, and each persons purpose for using that tool may be different, and that is why, to me, every tool can benefit each modeler differently. After all, most of us are in fact modelers first. So let’s just sand off that Shapeways FUD, and smooth those pock marked support areas, and continue modeling, both electronically, and by scratch. I just get weird when resin printing is made to sound rosy. It’s not, and we can all admit our tribulations. I even regret not waiting for a large volume DLP now.