3D Print Cooling: Difference between revisions

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=Thermodynamics of Print Layer Adhesion=
=Thermodynamics of Print Layer Adhesion=
*Good explanation. Layer below must be solid prior to printing the next layer, as the bottom layer must be in its final contracted (contraction occurs upon cooling) position, otherwise the next layer is put put down in the wrong place. The layer above must have enough thermal inertia to melt the layer below it - it is not that the layer below is still melted. https://hackaday.com/2016/01/29/keep-your-nozzle-hot-and-your-prints-cool/
*Good explanation. Layer below must be solid prior to printing the next layer, as the bottom layer must be in its final contracted (contraction occurs upon cooling) position, otherwise the next layer is put put down in the wrong place. The layer above must have enough thermal inertia to melt the layer below it - it is not that the layer below is still melted. https://hackaday.com/2016/01/29/keep-your-nozzle-hot-and-your-prints-cool/
=Fan CFM Measurement=
*Inflate a large plastic garbage bag with a small fan and measure time - [http://www.desiquintans.com/coolingtests]


=Cooling Fans=
=Cooling Fans=

Revision as of 03:44, 26 May 2018

Thermodynamics of Print Layer Adhesion

  • Good explanation. Layer below must be solid prior to printing the next layer, as the bottom layer must be in its final contracted (contraction occurs upon cooling) position, otherwise the next layer is put put down in the wrong place. The layer above must have enough thermal inertia to melt the layer below it - it is not that the layer below is still melted. https://hackaday.com/2016/01/29/keep-your-nozzle-hot-and-your-prints-cool/

Fan CFM Measurement

  • Inflate a large plastic garbage bag with a small fan and measure time - [1]

Cooling Fans

  • Oversized design on Thingiverse - [2]
  • Overview video -

  • Another shows the drastic difference between cooled and not cooled PLA -