Message from @Kaytee
Discord ID: 328659237133746176
it'd be closer to a normal fdm machine than a clay printer would
oh i realize
What're the best materials you can use for FDM
without ultra specialized equipment
depends on what you want
nyon is great for most things
The way i understand it polycarbonate and nylon are up there
what about glass-reinforced versions of those
or TPU
FRN is doable but you'll need to replace your nozzle every print
and possibly during a print
i use TPU fairly often
TPU seems fun since it's not strictly rigid
you will not get a smooth _and_ dimensionally accurate surface finish from tpu without some really dangerous "no normal person should own this" industrial solvents
so just be aware of that
also support structures are horrible pain to remove and will never come off cleanly
sanding and grinding the stuff smooth is next to impossible
You could fix that
with a double extrusion print
where the support material isnt tpu
But the solvents part seems kinda offputting
if you don't care about dimensional accuracy you can polish it with a propane torch
neat, those guys have it
should I?
also: try copolyester if you want a part for high temp applications
I dunno, probably not, i was mostly spitballing
it's a nightmare to get to adhere to the bed, but once you do you have plastic parts that will ignore boiling water like abs and pla will slightly warm air
If you wanna go for it - i wont stop you
FUUUUUCCKKK
but i'm not taking any responsibility :^)
xd, might see what I can do about money tomorrow
but I might get the .me one
worst comes to worst, I can transfer the domain to someone else if I buy it
hoooly shit the wanhao d7 came down to $350
Anywho, copolyester is basically dual extrusion right?
$150 shipping still tho
copolyester is an Engineering Plastic
3d printing is confusing