In his article: x-idler-bracket-continued Vik Olliver alluded to the fact that you can extrude filament with a smaller diameter than the hole in the nozzle. I did some experiments to see how fine I could go. In fact the final filament diameter is simply determined by the feed rate of the extruder and the travel rate of the nozzle, or in my case the bed. The filament stretches to the length that matches the rate of travel while it is still liquid. You can then calculate the mean diameter from the volume of material extruded. The nozzle height has to be a bit less than that mean diameter and then the width becomes a bit wider.
Here are three 20 x 20 x 20 open cubes with different wall thicknesses :-
The first was 1mm diameter filament extruded at 4mm per second with a height of 0.8mm giving a wall thickness of about 1.2mm.
The second was the same feed rate but with the extruder traveling over the bed at 16mm per second to give 0.5mm filament, the same as the nozzle hole diameter. The height was set to 0.4mm giving a wall thickness of about 0.6mm. As you can see it warps more but I expect it would behave if it was building a solid object. The bottom layer which was stuck to the table has better corner definition.
The third attempt was 0.35mm filament extruded at 16mm per second with a hight of 0.28mm and a width of about 0.5mm. As you can see holes started appearing but I think that was just because the sides buckled so badly. Interestingly the holes can be bridged by filament above that needs no support. Again, I think this would be OK making solid objects, or at least objects with thicker walls.
This is really good news as it means I can get down to the sort of resolution commercial machines get (0.25mm) without having to have a very small nozzle aperture, which would limit the flow rate. It remains to be seen what effect stretching has on the polymer but as it is still liquid at that point I think it wont increase the contraction much, if at all. It does mean I need very fast head movement to keep up the deposition rate, about 64mm per second. I think my machine will do that if I reconfigure the steppers for speed rather than torque, a simple one wire change.
Tuesday, 23 October 2007
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Nice!
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see the next act.
Would putting a base like this: (vertical slice view)
| |
| |
|\ /|
reduce the warping of the lower part of the wall? Building from the inside to the outside on each layer to allow the still cooling outer layers to press against and be supported by the inner layers.
hmm imagine more spaces between the top two lines such that the | characters align. Bah blogspot and ASCII art don't mix too well.
ReplyDeleteDavid,
ReplyDeleteYes blogspot is generaly rubbish with whitespace. When I insert code snippits I use pre tags but even then it eats one leading space each time I make an edit!
I have been thinking along similar lines. Extruding blocks in each corner should work because, not being linked they will not be drawn together and my resist the outer wall.
I would love to try this, but if see my latest post you will see it may be a long time, if ever.