HYDRAULIC PRESS 3D PRINTING?! at RAPID + TCT 2021!
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- čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
- Episode 3 from RAPID + TCT 2021 ( thanks to @SMEEvents) in Chicago! FOUR INCREDIBLE BOOTHS! We have @Stratasys with a human sized game of operation, LDO MOTORS with Dave from PRINTED SOLID showing off a VORON 0.1 KIT BUILD, FORTIFY with magnetic alignable resin, and IMPOSSIBLE OBJECTS using a hydraulic press to 3d print PEEK and PA12!
00:00 Intro!
00:51 Stratays
11:57 LDO Motors VORON 0.1 w/ Printed Solid
17:25 Fortify
26:28 Impossible Objects
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The up front honesty about the post processing of the hand was a really nice. Greatly boost my confidence in their integrity.
Right? Like, outright saying "this is NOT what it looks like when it comes off the print bed. You've still gotta sand and polish it". I like it!
Right? Like they finally realized that being honest & open about their technology sells more product. LOL.
The Impossible Objects stuff was amazing! He was a great rep and their process is super cool
Yeah, coolest part of this video for sure!
Indeed. They could get even finer resolution with _laser_ printing, though.
That impossible Objects carbon fiber layering w/ PEEK or Nylon is some next level stuff. Thank you, Joel.
Thor was freaking out when Joel threw the peddle to David, and when David threw it back.
@@ricky9307 Thor: *he’s not planning on taking that is he???*
@@toxiccan175 We printed this awesome bike pedal aaaaaaaaand it's gone
Anyone else get the feeling the guy from impossible objects was very happy to meet Joel.
He was.
Not that all of these weren't super impressive, but the Impossible Objects process blew me away with its possibilities in super strong materials. It's not unlike the process of the MiniMe Factory machines (which I believe are StrataSys powered machines if memory serves) with a component of how carbon ceramic brakes are made thrown in. Here's to hoping we have a home version in the next few years for the backyard engineer!
Great to see Thor on your channel! He's doing some great stuff at Impossible Objects
Thanks Joel for stop at LDO booth! Looking forward to your building on Voron soon.
After watching episodes 1 2and 3, I am so impressed that I can’t put into words. Thanks Mr Joel, mind blown 👍
Wow, the 3D Fortify stuff is super cool.
Excitement building for the V0.1 .... building... building... $650 ... tiny crackle of heart breaking.
Dude from Fortify was on point. Good job Fortify.
It's cool that bob ross got working in the carbon fiber + 3d printing industry
Thank you Joel, I love to see these machines and what we could expect to see passed down to consumers at some point.
Hydraulic printing is a highlight
The impossible objects process is very cool. Wonder how the final parts hold up under pressure…
While this was all very impressive I am beyond excited and blown away by the idea of the reinforced resin with *aligned* fibers to assist in not just strength but heat dissipation!
The potential this has to completely disrupt the manufacturing industry in cost, development time, and quality (due to more affordable and timely iterations is huge. If it works nearly as well as they say it does this could be a huge game changer.
Imagine combining the Aligned Fibers thing with the Impossible Objects sandwich-process. And an even higher DPI printer.
Another fascinating video. Thank you for bringing the show to us Joel.
I'm not seeing that Voron kit on the Printed Solid site yet.
On 5G it does use directional beam antennas. They're called m.i.m.o. phased beam array and while they can't get an exact beam like a lens can but, they can aim it directly at the phone with no moving parts. I would love to get some of those lens for an fpv antenna tracking system though.
+1
HI DAVID!
HI NERO!
The technology is expanding in leaps and bounds whish is amazing. Thanks Joel.
No, it's not. This is patented industrial technology. We normal users will get this in 20 years.
Amazing industry equipment. The best part is what industry can do today , the hobby guys might be able to do tomorrow.
Not if Stratasys has anything to do with it.
BEST INTRO CATCHLINE EVA!!😅😁😁
I love how the horse model's ears are backwards on his head 😂
WOW the magnetic aligned booth...dang!!!
Right? How cool is that?!!
looking good Dave and Joel!
Very good serie! thanks a lot!
This was incredibly cool! Gonna go watch eps 1 and 2, brb
Thank you for the vid, interesting to see new technologies!
Very informative. A great video. Thanks!
3 for 3! Thanks again for showing the other side of manufacturing, it was awesome to see.
F - for respects
Company: Impossible Objects. Rep name: Thor. I expect the mightiest of impossible objects... and that was im-press-ive. Such a unique system and a great rep. Still need to wrap my head around it a bit, but it will come eventually.
The handle of love😃 4:02
Was the two-part bone x-ray able? I used to have to do it with silicone molds only. By hand. Orders of over a hundred.
Hydraulic press 3D printing just sounds like a fancy way to say injection molding lol...
That's exactly what it is.
Injection molding is done in one step. Use hydraulics to close the mold and inject the material. This is done by printing each layer then use a hydraulic press and heat. Its a combination of different techs that neither technology can do on its own.
Show me the tooling to for a benchy.
Thank you for going and covering some of these booths. You’ve brought the convention to us 3-D printing nerds who can’t always make it.
Thanks for watching! Really happy I can get the chance to do this.
filled polymers shulda called it keystone...because thats game changing in inject molding
Tooling resin! this is amazing
I'm at the beginning and the only thing I can think of when you say "3d printing with a hydraulic press" is a "injection molding machine", can't wait to see what really happens though! Keep it going my dude!
Did you see? Impossible Objects?
Thor!! It was so nice meeting you at Rapid. Nice interview~
Thanks Chelsea!! My girlfriend absolutely LOVES the PolyTerra Candy Pink filament and we're currently planning projects around the rest of the pastel collection from Polymaker :D
Gonna have to check out Dave's site. I've been intrigued with the Vorons.
Couldn't help but hope the impossible objects guy was going to start painting happy little trees
that fortify is impressive.
Having high thermal conductivity combined with low electrical conductivity, and high electrical conductivity combined with low thermal conductivity, are two material properties that would both be excellent for thermoelectric coolers and thermoelectric generators.
Another great video! I definitely prefer you spending a good amount of time which each booth rather than just a quick glance at more booths (as I've seen on other channels), but I wouldn't mind also seeing an additional video, or added to these types of videos, a collection of clips of some highlights from booths that don't get "The Full Joel". Sorry for the extra work Sean (if he has you do this). High-5!
Can the blasted away fibers be reused in someway or are they wasted?
Impossible Objects was cool. How strong are their parts though? I mean sure, you can make a bicycle pedal, but could you also make frame lugs?
They felt strong to me but obviously they probably should be tested better than that :)
@@3DPrintingNerd They'd probably hold the Full Joel. They are PEEK and long strand carbon fiber.
I wish they had something like this in Australia
Haha "some people claim up to 1000 mm/s"..
Joel: "Suuuure.."
Albert247printing: "Am i a joke to you?"
czcams.com/video/UL1tg3eHFaU/video.html
1000mm/s is impossible.. or...
Mikkel! Nice to read you🦄
@@247printing @Nitram @3D Printing Nerd Joel should have you guys on for a chat some time to show what commercial 3d printers are actually capable of, that would be an instant watch for me :D
Cool🔥💕👌👍
Semiconductors on heatsinks without the need for insulation. Fantastic.
Huh what's that webcam module he's using on the Voron 0?
I like it it's slim and kind of neat
Hi Joel and sean have a good day
22:00 Hey that improve a lot the heatsink for Fullframe camera. Imagine have the body made by this ? and can disipate heat thorw the body and the motherbase dont make ploof. Because this can be printed for the motherboard entirly.
HOW DO I FIND DAVE FROM LDO MOTORS
He deserves milkshakes and high fives for what happened to that printer's top hat. I had a day like that today and when i saw this video i was like damn. feels.
great video as always, Joel.
Dave was at the LDO booth but owns and operates Printed Solid!
Wow.
Holy shit, who knew Voron v0 kits were that expensive
Have you done a review of the Creality Halot Sky? I haven't seen one but would love to see you do it.
I haven't. I do have one in the studio, still in the box. Just need to get through my queue to get it out and get some use on it.
niceeee
I want to see more industial applications, fewer toys. I see a manufacturing renaissance in the US based on 3d printing and CNC.
Luneberg lenses + 5G = deathrays !!
Dang I woke up really early today!
What's the definition of the long-fiber? continuous or chopped?
You missed your opportunity Joel, when you had the rib you should ha e asked him to make you, Eve!
I liked this thrice! @3d printing nerd
You can print a comb... ;D
With the method used by impossible objects - would that mean perfect bridges and overhangs too? As the whole print is effectively a support material until the unbound fibres are blasted away, I would assume this is an advantage of this method.
I'm actually more interested in the Fortify process, an insulator acting as a thermal conductor which is actually really cool - I'm not 100% sure if he got it across in the interview on some of the uses, but I'm thinking power connectors, USB plugs, all sorts of things where you have concentrated areas of heat where the casing is unable to act as a heatsink currently.
Consider a simple 12v automotive connector which I think he hinted at, like an Anderson connector used on jump leads: at the moment any heat build up from high current flow is just contained to the copper pins of the connector and maybe what can sink into the wires, but at high loads there's risks of the plastic connector warping/melting/burning. If the connector itself acts as a heatsink, the same size connector can carry more load, by embedding the pins tight into the surrounding material.
Also I'd assume this happens in reverse, where this could sink heat away into metal components. I'm thinking components embedded into engine blocks, custom designed very intricate shims between circuit boards and a proper copper heatsink, able to touch all the components without fear of shorting. A lot of applications indeed! I'd be very curious to hear about the temperature resistance and thermal expansion of parts made in this way.
In regards to Impossible Objects, process, overhangs are a none issue as you stated. Packing densities can be pretty tight too as you only need a single page to separate parts.
Yes! The Impossible Objects process can output any geometry, so bridges and overhangs are no problem for the CBAM-2
At 28'46" mark… those little puffs of carbon fiber dust. I wouldn't to stand next to it.
If you don't want to print your Voron parts and don't have enough patience for the PIF queue, Who you gonna call?
26:00 tan delta test value?
I seen an interview with Sanjay from e3d on another channel and he said that the prices would be reasonable. 100 dollars for a nozzle on Amazon in Canada bahahaha it's not even the "indestructible" one
👍🏻
When will people start adjusting the print temperature vs speed... all use geared extruders and dont see that it is a fix on an issue that is much easier resolved by the viscosity adjustment of filament. Never ever had any issue on my two machines without geared extruders and both use bowden as well.
Stratasys, boo, hiss
Edit: Aside from that though, this was cool stuff 👍
Glad you liked most of it :)
29:00 me after Tacobell.
Hi David
The 120x120x120 printer seems to me like it'd be a downgrade from a Prusa, especially when he mentions that you print the top hat on a Prusa. Why would that be worth purchasing when for just a small increase in price I could get a Prusa?
650 it's tiny and he made it in a couple of days lol is it worth it guys? I'm genuinely asking as i dont know
Amazing progress on the printing . Everywhere you stopped the product is simply amazing. Oscar Anderson Master medical protootyper.
Joel! Where's your Voron? Join the party come on! :)
Hi Joel thanks for amazing videos. But you never actually gave us an conclusive review on Ender 3 v2. And could you give us some thoughts on which one is better Artillery Genius or V2 ?
I've had very mixed luck with the Ender 3 v2 and it's currently taken apart. It freezes during printing enough to where I just stopped using it. The GENIUS is an older machine, but I did like it. Sorry I'm not more conclusive.
@@3DPrintingNerd do you have any recommendations for somewhere in the same price range?
The pedal might seem light, but it's only one part. Add the bearings and metal spindle and the weight savings will be minimal over one of the many polymer pedals already on the market made by injection molding, at much lower cost.
Every ounce counts to achieve peak performance!
Hi
650 for that xp
That small LDO printer was cute, but I don't think it's worth $650.
Maybe 5 years ago, but not in the cut throat of today's 3D market.
He looks like markiplier mk2
Thor told me about thsi channel
This*
I have been watching your videos all day
600dpi is 43 micron. Edit: x/y resolution.
The Impossible Object ink cartridges have a print resolution of 600 DPI to print information on a single layer. The final build is compressed to a layer height of 50 microns.
THOR!!
@@3dThor correct. I was commenting on the X/Y resolution given the "dots per inch".
@@3DPrintingNerd JOEL!! :D
This was all great, but gotta say something.
Printed Solid is one of my favorite companies for 3d printing stuff, but $650 for that tiny printer that you have to put together yourself? Yikes...
I doubt the injection mold will hold long.
Carbon Fiber DOES add strength. Parts are obviously stiffer, you can feel it. Not all brands are created equally though and it doesn't improve strength in certain plastics. Also CNC Kitchen has done serious NERD testing to prove this. I have printed equal parts from the same plastic, one cf infused and one not and I can hang on one and not the other. That's all the proof I need.
Off topic, I didn't how to dm you, but of all your expertise in 3D printers. Could you recommend a 3D printer that is more relayable, less stressful to fix, semi big build suface, and user friendly. Lookin at at flashforge 4 ish, or cr 10s pro v2 ish. Something along those lines. Thank you in advance.
$250,000 to print stronger objects 😑
f
F
I hope Stratasys doesn't come a gutsa. They thinking they will charge more to print other material well other booths this year have challenged them so they need to up their game big time.
72 hours for simple open shut two part aluminum mold...just saying.
First?
So someone correct me if I'm wrong but that $650 price tag for a Voron 0.1 kit is laughable expensive yes? I mean WTF are they thinking with that price on the small machine... I would really like to see how they justify that price and what kind of inflated margins are they trying to score?
The full BOM is available and anyone can look up the prices or source their own components.
As for the cost of the LDO kit? Comes with all panels pre cut and sized, all wiring cut to size and crimped ready for installation, all extrusions tapped/drilled. Bed with heater installed
Wiring alone your saving a few hours of labour, same with the bed pre drilled/tapped and heater installed
This is a low volume machine, not a mass produced, costed down creality, with high end components, and alot of work pre-done. The kit is worth the premium IMO
They are thinking quality is important, chinesium is cheap yes, but I’m not buying that again.
Tell me you are not really into 3d printing, without telling me you are not really into it.
Anyone want to give me 350k?
Hmm should we practice using the bone saw on a pig leg or an $800 fake bone? Maybe we should just print out the whole pig with realistic marrow, skin, circulatory system and piggy brain. Come on. It's cool, but pigs are just fine for learning surgery. And cheap.
F