How to Smooth 3D Pen Creations | Tutorial

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  • čas přidán 17. 10. 2019
  • I tested out different methods for smoothing the surface of 3D Pen creations to see which one works the best.
    I also share some smoothing tips and tricks to help you get the best results. These techniques are intended for PLA smoothing only.
    Smoothing Methods Compared:
    Sanding and Filing
    3D Gloop (liquid smoother)
    Wood Burning Tool / Soldering Iron
    Combinations of all of the above
    Link to my 3D Pen ADVANCED Techniques Tutorial
    (which talks more about using a Wood Burning Tool):
    • How to 3D PEN Tutorial...
    My social media accounts:
    Twitter: / potentprintable
    Instagram: / potentprintables
    3D Pen used in this video:
    amzn.to/2K6c5AT
    (provided by Scribbler 3D Pen-
    scribbler3dpen.com/)
    3D Gloop (provided by them):
    www.3dgloop.com/
    Tools and Supplies used in this video:
    Wood Burning Set
    (**use stainless steel tips**)
    amzn.to/2Uypslu
    150 Grit Flexible Sandpaper
    amzn.to/2X6Byil
    As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
    *The tools and methods shown in this tutorial can be dangerous, so please use the correct safety equipment, be careful and use caution when dealing with anything from this tutorial.*
    #3dpen #3d펜 #3Dpero
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 317

  • @PresidentBread
    @PresidentBread Před 4 lety +574

    i dont even own a 3d pen why am i watching this lol

  • @jackielearnsandteaches
    @jackielearnsandteaches Před 3 lety +13

    Thanks for this video. I watched it months ago, eventually tried a pen... eventually got back to it... and eventually got around to getting a soldering iron. Here I am, months later, and I needed a video on how to use it. This was STILL the best explanation. Kudos!

  • @ChaosRaptor
    @ChaosRaptor Před 4 lety +34

    I’ve also seen people use lighters or something along the lines of something like a lighter or bbq lighter

  • @ThePracy
    @ThePracy Před 3 lety +25

    im almost giving up on smothing this. I thought the problem was abs and i started to use pla. Nothing. Paper filer doesnt seems to do ANYTHING to the piece. Using a drill still doesnt give a straight surface. I saw you saying that you do many rounds of smothing and sanding. Thats the only thing i didnt try yet. I had no idea about this, No one says that! lol
    Lets try once again. *prays* lol
    btw, your channel is amazing! I hope i get there soon

    • @marsbars5907
      @marsbars5907 Před 3 lety +3

      hm, an issue i find is that the surface has warped over time from the heat and layers of plastic, another one is that the surface is shiny and "smooth" but not geometrically smooth, like the spheres in the video are a lot smoother by the end of the various processes, but geometrically they are still very wobbly. my best tactic is to have some mechanical way of sanding the surface, for a flat surface i have the sand stapled to a plank, and the plastic piece is pressed and rubbed in one direction, back and forth, you get a very clean surface, because the mechanics remove my nerves and shaky hands from the process almost completely.

  • @mtraven23
    @mtraven23 Před 4 lety +32

    you might try a heat gun after the sanding. I have never worked with pen prints but have had good success with my 3d printer prints. If you do it just enough, it will bring bring back the original glossy sheen. I think this works by relieving stresses created by sanding and melts the tiny hairs of plastic that remain from sanding, surface tension pulls on that tiny amount of plastic thus smoothing and restoring the "just melted" glaze (because it was just melted). That's my working theory anyways.
    For the scale you work on, something like a reflow soldering setup would be ideally suited. If you are not familiar, they are tiny, focused guns with very precise control over temperature. It could also be described as a hot air jet, that is to say there is some pressure to act upon the print in the exact spot you are heating to move material around. think of it like a hot "air brush". The best part is, its effectively non contact.

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety +13

      Hi, thanks for the ideas and feedback! I have tried using my handheld torch, but with that it is very hard to control the application of heat, so you usually end up melting and making the surface look much worse.
      I like the idea of trying a heat gun (which I have) and especially the reflow setup (if I can get ahold of one)- I'll have to give those a try. Thanks again for the ideas!

    • @Elevenbane
      @Elevenbane Před 4 lety +5

      I've had a chance to try using a heat gun, it works great! I found the best combination seems to be a woodburning iron--->sanding--->heat gun process.
      The biggest downfall is that the heat gun can expose hidden pits under the surface texture. But the holes are usually tiny pinholes, that are easy to to fix up later

    • @forestweston5055
      @forestweston5055 Před rokem +2

      A regular cloth buffing wheel with a white polishing rouge will make your wood burner smoothed object really pop. And it’s very quick!

    • @Janovich
      @Janovich Před 9 měsíci

      Can confirm. A heat gun will bring back the glossy sheen after sanding. However unfortunately it does next to nothing to help with smoothing the surface itself. Instead of melting layer lines together the PLA mass will just absorb all of the heat and become malleable. Great for bending 3d prints into particular shapes though!

  • @viggo_k8656
    @viggo_k8656 Před 4 lety +20

    *SMOOTH*

  • @bigfoot8778
    @bigfoot8778 Před 4 lety +10

    For got my favorite method, go like this. Wood burning, sanding, torch to get shiny back.

  • @Suprem3GamerDamianWinchester

    Hi Mr.Potent, very nice tutorial thank you for that, also I want to give you a tip for a great finish, after using the wood burner method you can add this one which is heating it with a heat gun, it takes practice but I am sure that you can make it possible 😀

  • @CYMotorsport
    @CYMotorsport Před 2 lety +1

    the hakko t18 c3 is pretty amazing if you came into this already with a soldering iron. You have to be patient given it has less surface area but really effective. also just a heads up, the kit you link to does not include the smoother you are using.

  • @sherlingplacencia6102
    @sherlingplacencia6102 Před 3 lety +7

    I just got a 3d pen today and have no idea how to use it so I just searched it on yt and I watched a video of urs before this one about things that 3d pen users do wrong and ur channel really helped me! Thx👍👍

  • @MileyonDisney
    @MileyonDisney Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for another great video!

  • @chefranylaitenu7731
    @chefranylaitenu7731 Před 2 lety

    Your video's are ❤️ tomorrow I Wil work for the first time with a 3d pen and I was looking for what information and your channel came up!
    Thank you so much for your content Sir ⭐

  • @grac1cle341
    @grac1cle341 Před 4 lety +5

    His voice is so calming wth

  • @tragicallysarah7623
    @tragicallysarah7623 Před 4 měsíci +1

    What about an electric filer? The type you would see in a nail salon. I was gifted a 3D pen this Christmas so I'm pretty new at this craft. This is the first video I've come across that explains techniques in a way that actually keeps my attention. Lol. I will definitely be checking out more of your content. I love to sculpt but so far, this is quite different from sculpting. Lol.

  • @vinayakonimani7628
    @vinayakonimani7628 Před 2 lety +3

    Its better to have a controllable soldering iron. You can set the temp to what u want. Take care to not keept it too high if you are a beginner. For newbies: keep the temp low and be steady n slow with your hands. High temp can smolder the plastic.
    You may also want to try a hot air soldering iron. They blow out hot air.
    Or you can also use an old cloth iron for larger parts u may need to modify it to make it workable for ur requirements

  • @peacesweekly8697
    @peacesweekly8697 Před rokem +1

    3D printing beginner here! thank you so much this video was very informative 💗

  • @trashlambo
    @trashlambo Před 3 lety +6

    For sanding, why not use a sanding tool like a sanding tip on a dremel or one of those disc sanders? For the latter, you have ready access to different grits as well, although you'd need hearing as well eye protective equipment (safety first).
    Edit: dremel doesn't work well apparently, but what about a disc sander?

  • @ThePracy
    @ThePracy Před 3 lety +15

    could you do tthis with ABS? would be useful

  • @coraloverdostahan1232

    Hello! Thank you very much for your video! Is it possible to use 3D Gloop just for a shine finishing? can I mix it with glitter?
    Thank you!

  • @RabbitsInBlack
    @RabbitsInBlack Před 4 lety +1

    After Sanding so it's a smooth surface then take a quick torch on it. Brings out that shine. There is also painting it with 3d Printing Resin and then curing it might work.

  • @otreblaosucnam8760
    @otreblaosucnam8760 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic!!! !!!

  • @RedFlyer350
    @RedFlyer350 Před 4 lety +2

    I would like to know more about the stainless steel tips for the wood burning tool. I have one of those with the brass tips...

  • @megaman616
    @megaman616 Před 4 lety +3

    Sanding, filling gaps and sanding again will get you a mirror finish with progressive finer grit

  • @stephyweedy
    @stephyweedy Před 4 lety +2

    These tips are cool , thank you Man .

  • @Hyraethian
    @Hyraethian Před 4 lety

    I use Duramic PLA, It gets gummy in acetone but it wont smooth in a vapor bath.
    I have found that an acetone soaked rag can be used to buff the print lines out.
    You may want either a a pair of Butyl rubber glove(think heavy duty rubber gloves) or lotion because it can potentially chap your hands.

  • @Ervinzky.Geraldi
    @Ervinzky.Geraldi Před 2 lety

    I'm planning to get my own 3d pen, this is really helpful. Thanks!

  • @WARPAINTandUnicorns
    @WARPAINTandUnicorns Před 4 měsíci

    I haven't tested this out yet with PLA yet but with other thermal plastics. After you are done getting the final smooth shape you want, you can hit other thermal plastics with a heat gun lightly to reactivate the surface so that it returns to the glossy plastic look if it was able to be glossy originally (Worbla Crystal Art is one such plastic).
    I suspect it needs practice and I would use a mini heat shrink gun instead of a large heat gun for control (I have both guns for this reason).

  • @lyhardgaming1909
    @lyhardgaming1909 Před 3 lety +1

    nice butterfly and pen

  • @ScornedOne1080
    @ScornedOne1080 Před 2 lety

    Recently found a video where they used card scrapers to smooth 3D prints. Got some myself and they work wonders!

  • @LinkinPaw
    @LinkinPaw Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks for this video.

  • @jlryan2011
    @jlryan2011 Před 2 lety +1

    For the wood burning tips you made, it looks like they’re carriage bolts you’ve modified? What are the sizes for the thread and thickness? How’d you get the bolt head flat, grinder & sanding?

  • @denchuesh3928
    @denchuesh3928 Před 4 lety

    Hi!
    Can I use this pen for creating plastic details for home. Want to hang the load on it. Is it suitable for this?

  • @dantegaming3166
    @dantegaming3166 Před 3 lety +3

    amazing video! I don't 3d pen personally, but after watching this video, I might try it. Keep up the amazing work and you will get to 10K subs in no time!

  • @vahramchilingaryan1175
    @vahramchilingaryan1175 Před rokem +1

    That’s what I need I always thought how to smooth it out 😅🎉🎉

  • @paulkemp8520
    @paulkemp8520 Před 3 lety +3

    A soldering iron should do the same right?

  • @PotentPrintables
    @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety +34

    Interested in improving your 3D pen skills? Check out this playlist- has something for all skill levels!
    czcams.com/play/PL2emNPgwaprp_tl3YWI9i6n082hRq7E8q.html
    Edit on 12/26/2020- Lots of people have been asking about making the stainless steel tips. Here is how I did it:
    The stainless steel tips I made myself from 8-32 threaded stainless screws, with a grinding wheel. Note I can only say this size works for the wood burning tool linked in the description. After grinding the head down to the shape I wanted, I made the angled bend.
    I put a bunch of 8-32 nuts on the screw, stopping at where I wanted to make the angled bend. Then I clamped all the nuts in a vice and bent the screw. Once the bend was made, I was able to remove the nuts from the straight section with the threads intact.

    • @ibrahamastabile5944
      @ibrahamastabile5944 Před 4 lety

      Could you explain the two filment comparison that you mentioned earlier in this video please

    • @olleh1
      @olleh1 Před 4 lety

      Can you just use a pan

    • @arthurlino4362
      @arthurlino4362 Před 4 lety

      how did you make the stainless steel tips ?

  • @professord8888
    @professord8888 Před 3 lety +1

    Cool video, subscribed. What about trying a heat gun or soldering torch?

  • @yuiop271
    @yuiop271 Před 3 lety

    When I use my 3D pen for PLA and TPU it smell ok not that much at all. But when I smoothing the plastic with a woodburning tool it smells very much and really toxic especially with the TPU. Why is that? Is it the same for you? Or is my Wood burning to hot (It doesnt say anywhere How hot it gets) or is it beacause of the brasstip i have? Thanks for answers.

  • @Astrobiologica
    @Astrobiologica Před 4 lety +5

    please tell me more about the stainless steel tips, thank you I found this video very helpful, liked and subscribed. I have ordered the same iron, it seems like the best one I have seen for the smoothing task.

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Glad the video was helpful and thanks for subscribing!
      The stainless steel tips I made myself from 8-32 threaded stainless screws, with a grinding wheel.

    • @omarnaguib5118
      @omarnaguib5118 Před 4 lety

      Can you plz send me a link for this woodburner in amazon

  • @JohnyPatrick
    @JohnyPatrick Před rokem

    This is so good. I've come to a similar solution for my 3d prints. I didn't want to paint them but almost majority do this. I feel like what's the point of filaments if this is the case. Anyhow, I've ordered a sanding hand tool (small and compact) and I think I'm going to order the wood burner too.

  • @DustinWoloschuk
    @DustinWoloschuk Před 2 lety

    did you ever end up making a dedicated video about your stainless steel tips?
    id like to see that...

  • @ZebraandDonkey
    @ZebraandDonkey Před 4 lety +1

    Another great video. Nice.

  • @MrRatman259
    @MrRatman259 Před 2 lety

    For the brass tips you have to clean constantly. It also could mean that the temperature is to hot so it’s burning the filament.

  • @luciferdiesalone
    @luciferdiesalone Před 3 lety

    Love the vid man, wanted to check what can help smoth these and just Watched a vid from uncle jessy and he tries some stuff to smoth 3D prints maybe might work to 3D pen protects . He tryes resin in liquid form and sands it. He also talks about wood filler so not sure if you wanna try that , also XTC 3D, and finally talks about automotive filler/primer so if you try these and work might be cool to see a vid about it . Don't have the the hability to try all these myself .

  • @froggygd6153
    @froggygd6153 Před rokem

    Wow good Technic

  • @raffaelepanella8868
    @raffaelepanella8868 Před 4 lety +3

    Your smooth was a smooth smooth

  • @PapaDeuce27
    @PapaDeuce27 Před rokem

    What temp setting and how did you make your tip?

  • @YuBongKim
    @YuBongKim Před rokem

    Wood Burning tools are really good

  • @Pro_Football_729
    @Pro_Football_729 Před 4 lety +1

    great tutorial , great work

  • @Elevenbane
    @Elevenbane Před 4 lety

    Please make a tutorial on how to make those stainless steel wood burning tool tips! Or link to where they can be ordered, I'm very interested in adding that to my 3D pen kit

  • @imanopenfire
    @imanopenfire Před 4 lety +2

    Your videos awesome... and your voice is clear as glass! 👌

  • @carbilicon
    @carbilicon Před 2 lety

    Thank you. Subscribed.

  • @3DPlasticFantasy
    @3DPlasticFantasy Před 4 lety +8

    I had a feeling that 3d gloop might did the work like vapor smoothing on abs plastics.
    Another way that I personally use after sanding is varnish (with brush), in case you don't wanna use lighter and risk to get burning marks.

  • @a.l.w.1639
    @a.l.w.1639 Před 3 lety

    How did you make your "stainless steel custom tips" ???

  • @zachhughes9806
    @zachhughes9806 Před 3 lety +1

    Could you use a heat gun to smooth 3D sculpture

  • @jackaltraid9338
    @jackaltraid9338 Před 2 lety

    Is there anywhere I can get those stainless steel tips?

  • @Justwayne88
    @Justwayne88 Před 4 lety +1

    Interesting video I enjoyed it I like all the different methods, i have never tried the gloop and probably now never will, as you have proved light file and sand then soldering iron wood burner best way.
    Have you tried a heat gun that works or same principal small blow torch but move fast to prevent burning ?

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Thank you! I have tried a small handheld heating torch but it either melts too much or too little- it is very difficult to control.

  • @forestweston5055
    @forestweston5055 Před rokem

    Cloth buffing wheel with white rouge after the wood burning treatment!

  • @Sarah18126
    @Sarah18126 Před 2 měsíci

    In a few Days, I'll have to Do an oral presentation about 3D pencils and let me Tell you that it's one of these moments where you're like "THANK GOD THIS VIDEO EXISTS"

  • @zambiekill7046
    @zambiekill7046 Před 3 lety

    To be onest I just add more and while it's hot and I use the side of the metal to smooth the plastic. Not the best but still works

  • @blob5634
    @blob5634 Před 4 lety +1

    even after using a stainless steel tip it still leaves brown marks for me?

  • @acawley6330
    @acawley6330 Před 3 lety

    Did you ever make a video on the stainless steel tips?

  • @michaelsantos88888
    @michaelsantos88888 Před 2 lety

    Can you make a dedicated video on how to make those stainless steel tips for wood burning too?
    I tried an old soldering iron and it smudged black spots on an orange colored project I'm working on. Then I planned to buy wood burning tool and searched online but none has those flat tops you're using.
    Please make a tutorial for those tips.

  • @jaceofspades1346
    @jaceofspades1346 Před 4 lety +2

    I have the same wood burning kit. Id like to see what heat setting you’re using and about the stainless tips you were using. I was having trouble smoothing with the brass tips

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      For PLA I set it just into the orange section of the dial. The stainless steel tips I made myself from 8-32 threaded stainless screws, with a grinding wheel.

  • @arthurlino4362
    @arthurlino4362 Před 4 lety

    how did you make the stainless steel tips ?

  • @michaelhill4472
    @michaelhill4472 Před 4 lety +4

    I absolutely would like more information on how you made those stainless steel tips! What would you suggest for cleaning the tip. Just a damp cloth?

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety +1

      Someone else asked this question on a different video and I gave a bunch of details there:
      czcams.com/video/K2goTOoU5J8/video.html
      For cleaning it I just use a paper towel.

  • @NickDeVincentis
    @NickDeVincentis Před 4 lety +2

    SO SMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOTTHHHHHH

  • @user-dk5fj2kn6j
    @user-dk5fj2kn6j Před 4 lety +3

    very very gooooooood~~

  • @MagiacomPracy
    @MagiacomPracy Před 3 lety

    i tried with wood soldering iron, it sticks all in the iron and its too hard to smooth. almost impossible. i gave up.
    what should i've been doing wrong?

  • @RobLeonard
    @RobLeonard Před 4 lety

    What would happen if you used a butane torch, or heating it in an oven?

  • @mykahhancock3512
    @mykahhancock3512 Před 2 lety

    what tool do you use for wood burning? And what 3d pen do you use?

  • @AceKaci
    @AceKaci Před 3 lety +2

    Great info! Can you make a video on how you made your stainless steel wood burning tips?

  • @Gaps666
    @Gaps666 Před 2 měsíci

    Jak się nazywa to urządzenie którego Ty używasz do wygładzania plastiku

  • @palpongracz5049
    @palpongracz5049 Před 3 lety +2

    Hello! Can you help me find the best temperature to melt the plastic? What I use a soldering iron is unfortunately a bit burns the plastic and leaves a brown mark.

    • @TheOakMan
      @TheOakMan Před 2 lety

      I think for pla it should be around 400-500°f

  • @Magnamhut
    @Magnamhut Před 3 lety +4

    The Woodburning is smoother than my enemies brains

  • @saraa_90006
    @saraa_90006 Před 3 měsíci

    يا قدمي
    آخر مره شفت المقطع من ٣ سنوات

  • @daniellaschaening4470
    @daniellaschaening4470 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm late to this but i would really appreciate more detail on the stainless steel tips!

  • @SumDumChum
    @SumDumChum Před 3 lety +1

    For the tip on thr wood burner what did you use? I have tried this technique but I cant seem to find the right size sheet metal screw. It looks like you use a stainless steel screw but I've had a hard time finding the right one and when I did it seemed that you have yours bent to a slight angle which I have tried but failed to get a consisten result. When I followed this it seemd I was stripping the threads and not getting a good result. After watching your grind video do you think you could have done your oven smoothing technique on that project or is it too delicate and ornate of a shape?
    You're the reason I got into 3D pens and will be diving back into it seeing as hie I have rolls and rolls of filament but lost some mojo after trying some projects that just seemed to be more deflating.
    You are inspiring me again though and love your videos 👏👏👍👍

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 3 lety

      Super glad to hear you’re getting back into it! Glad my videos helped :)
      The stainless steel tips I made myself from 8-32 threaded stainless screws, with a grinding wheel. Note I can only say this size works for the wood burning tool linked in the description. After grinding the head down to the shape I wanted, I made the angled bend.
      I put a bunch of 8-32 nuts on the screw, stopping at where I wanted to make the angled bend. Then I clamped all the nuts in a vice and bent the screw. Once the bend was made, I was able to remove the nuts from the straight section with the threads intact.

  • @3DpenHOONY
    @3DpenHOONY Před 4 lety +2

    It's a good job.👍

  • @johncline3033
    @johncline3033 Před 4 lety +1

    New guy here. Nice work and I think the sanding then heat to bring back the color worked best. I'll have to buy a pen and give it a go. Just when I think I've done all the art I can do, I find video's like these lol.

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Welcome and thank you! You'll have a lot of fun with it..good luck!

  • @2735angel
    @2735angel Před 2 lety

    Can I super glue 3D pen stuff together?

  • @ellisgolden734
    @ellisgolden734 Před 3 lety

    Thanks i spent 3 hours sandind some

  • @nitrothunderbird6740
    @nitrothunderbird6740 Před 4 lety +2

    How did you make your own wood-burning tool tips (especially the flat one used in the video)?

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Someone else asked this question on a different video and I gave a bunch of details there:
      czcams.com/video/K2goTOoU5J8/video.html

  • @AClarke2007
    @AClarke2007 Před 2 lety

    I use a plug in socket dimmer adapter to control the temperature of my wood burning tool.

  • @alexmorgun851
    @alexmorgun851 Před 4 lety +1

    Is it toxic when woodburning?

  • @I.no.ah.guy57
    @I.no.ah.guy57 Před 3 lety

    @PotentPrintables I just got a woodburning tool and tried it out on this penguin i made. The black smoothed out pretty well but once i got to the white, i started getting burned PLA smeared all over it. I switched from the flat tip to a chisel soldering tip, it wasnt as bad but it was still there. I dont see that happen to anyone else in the many videos Ive watched when people use a woodburner to smooth their 3D pen creations. Any suggestions for me? Its very frustrating

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 3 lety

      I'd first try turning the temperature down little by little. You want the lowest temp that the filament melts easily at.
      If that doesn't solve the problem, it may be the material type of the smoothing tip you are using. I found stainless steel tips work the best. Many wood burning tool tips come in brass or bronze, which doesn't work well. There is a section in this video where I talk a little about that.

    • @I.no.ah.guy57
      @I.no.ah.guy57 Před 3 lety

      @@PotentPrintables yeah unfortunately I bought a cheap one from Harbor Freight and it is non-adjustable, so it just gets really hot. That sucks, guess I gotta return it and get one from Home Depot. I noticed the silver tips worked better because the filament doesn't stick to it and burn on it much, that's my problem with the flat brass blade. It ends up smearing the burnt filament all over

  • @aylmerlee1323
    @aylmerlee1323 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you!!!!!

  • @DJDaisho
    @DJDaisho Před rokem

    my personal preference is actually a handheld battery dremel . . . can get one fairly cheap from walmart( HART - one of the better options imho) and a pretty comprehensive bits kit from harbor freight (the oval one is the best) and then all it takes is practice tyo figure out which bits do what to the PLA or ABS . . . also the 3d smoother stuff is a waste of money . . . PLA responds to acetone the same way, and ABS responds to alcohol the same way

  • @musicwaves97
    @musicwaves97 Před 4 lety +2

    Do you have or would you make a tutorial on how to make the stainless steal tips? I would love to know how since all I can find are copper tips. Amazing video and much love from Canada 🥰

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks and hope everything in Canada is well! I probably won't make a video about it, but I used stainless steel screws and a grinding wheel to make the tips I have.

    • @musicwaves97
      @musicwaves97 Před 4 lety

      Potent Printables omg thanks for replying! I will try that 😊

    • @therockk
      @therockk Před 4 lety

      Potent Printables Great video, love all your videos. Thanks for all the help!! Ive also tried to make them from stainless steel screws, bolts and not having great success. They are not heating up to same level as the rest of the tool,.When I grinned down the screws they still got the Philips head + showing .... The bolts are easier and I’ve even die’d them so they screw right on the wood burning tool,. But still i get the same problem. Could you explain a little more in detail how you got yours to work?

    • @therockk
      @therockk Před 4 lety

      @Potent Printables Actually never mind. I figured it out.. And ill upload a video shortly on how to do it so no one else has to go through the same nonsense I did with screws, bolts, etc lol...

  • @brocklievsay8262
    @brocklievsay8262 Před 3 lety

    How about a propane torch to heat and remelt the plastic?

  • @Jinx6670
    @Jinx6670 Před 3 lety

    How did you make your tips??

  • @gamerjoe5026
    @gamerjoe5026 Před 4 lety

    will the brass tips always leave stains even if you sand it after ??it will be help full if you answer thanks.

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Yes, it will still leave stains. I have not had good luck removing the stains, even with sanding.

  • @michaelkinsey7667
    @michaelkinsey7667 Před 4 lety

    Whats the name of the red pen i want to buy one

  • @juckendesAuge
    @juckendesAuge Před 4 lety +3

    Hello,
    can you test epoxy resin and trop it on the surface?
    Thank you very much

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety

      Just by itself or after using a wood burning tool?

    • @juckendesAuge
      @juckendesAuge Před 4 lety

      @@PotentPrintables only the epoxy resin. Before, you can Mix the resin with color.

  • @55djaki
    @55djaki Před 4 lety +1

    How do you keep your soldering iron clean while smoothing? I keep getting little bits of burnt plastic stuck to the project

    • @PotentPrintables
      @PotentPrintables  Před 4 lety +1

      I use a paper towel, folded over twice into a small square. I wipe the tip frequently because I am paranoid about ruining the model I am working on.
      If you are getting little burnt pieces coming off your model it might mean that you have the temperature too high on your smoothing tool.

  • @elysegambino1597
    @elysegambino1597 Před 4 lety +1

    I like that you mentioned that you sanded for 30 minutes, how long did you use the wood burner for?

    • @elysegambino1597
      @elysegambino1597 Před 4 lety +2

      Oops I just got an answer by finishing the video 😉👍🏼

  • @toxicslushpuppy
    @toxicslushpuppy Před 3 lety

    Thanks! All I can say is BLAAAAAAAADE!

  • @seze93
    @seze93 Před 4 lety

    if u wanna bring the colour back after sanding but dont want to touch your work with a hot iron just bring it close to somkeless flame ...for exaple from methylated spirits

  • @stephenjones4739
    @stephenjones4739 Před 4 lety +1

    I would use my Dremel 👍

  • @PrintNPlay
    @PrintNPlay Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent work, as always!