Recycle your failed 3D prints! Make new filament at home.

SdĂ­let
VloĆŸit
  • čas pƙidĂĄn 27. 04. 2024
  • I recycled my old PLA prints and made new filament out of it! Let me show you how I extruded my own material with the Filastruder.
    Check out our CNC Kitchen products at cnckitchen.store/ or at resellers www.cnckitchen.com/reseller and on AMAZON (EU) geni.us/s8rYtQ
    💚 Support me 💚
    Patreon: / cnckitchen
    Join as a CZcams member!
    Original CNC Kitchen Threaded Inserts: geni.us/CNCKInsertsChoice
    Merch: teespring.com/stores/cnckitchen
    Buy an Original Prusa i3 printer: geni.us/CNCKPrusa
    PayPal: www.paypal.me/CNCKitchen
    Shop at Matterhackers(US): www.matterhackers.com/?aff=7479
    Shop at 3DJake(EU): geni.us/zHvnB
    🎙Check out my PODCAST with Tom Sanladerer
    / @themeltzone
    🛒 Equipment used in this video (Affiliate Links):
    Original Prusa i3 Mk3S: geni.us/CNCKPrusaMk3
    Filastruder & Filawinder: geni.us/wvbzOE
    Food dehydrator: geni.us/PxDE
    Cheap blender: geni.us/CgwmLB0
    ⚙ My gear (Affiliate Links):
    đŸŽ„ CAMERAS & LENSES
    Panasonic GH5 - Professional 4k60 camera: geni.us/LMN0CmS
    Panasonic GX80/GX85 - Great value system camera: geni.us/M2Sm
    10-25mm f1.4 - Awesome Lense: geni.us/ZTBH
    30mm f2.8 macro - Great Macro Lense: geni.us/vEwqD
    12-35mm f2.6 - Great allround lense: geni.us/S9GOsr
    14-140mm f3.5-5.6 - My go-to travel lense: geni.us/fSAyKo
    25mm f1.4 - Nice prime for photoraphy: geni.us/mqWM
    🎙AUDIO
    Rode Video Mic Pro - Shotgun mic: geni.us/6JFRdJ
    Rode Film Maker Kit - Wireless mic: geni.us/XMD2N
    Rode NT-USB - Studio Mic: geni.us/YVONvy
    🔮 LIVE STREAMING
    Elgatoo Stream Deck: geni.us/ppIiAL
    Elgatoo HDMI USB Capture Card: geni.us/imhD
    Logitech C920 - Overhead camera: geni.us/ViVgB
    Filastruder forums: www.soliforum.com/forum/18/fil...
    🏆 Do you want to help me cover my running costs? Send me a dollar or two over PayPal, it helps me a lot!
    www.paypal.me/CNCKitchen
    đŸŒŒ Even watching the ads before my videos helps me a lot!
    Follow me on Twitter: / cnc_kitchen
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáƙe • 3,3K

  • @CNCKitchen
    @CNCKitchen  Pƙed 5 lety +263

    Did you know that I record a bi-weekly PodCast with Thomas Sanladerer?
    LISTEN TO IT: czcams.com/channels/zUgJrG-w_KQexroYkJR9XQ.html

    • @MrFox_Adventures
      @MrFox_Adventures Pƙed 5 lety +6

      preciousplastic.com has developed an open shredder that could help you out and they do quite a lot of work with recycling plastic.

    • @Kilisei
      @Kilisei Pƙed 5 lety +4

      Deutscher oder

    • @FoxiCATS
      @FoxiCATS Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Good idea, you have a russian translate of this video? (I live from Russia and not good know English language)

    • @biogarten427
      @biogarten427 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Guten Tag wusste nicht das du aus Deutschland kommst aber mega cool und by the way mega gutes video hatte 2ganze mĂŒlleimer voll mit den Zeug weil ich noch nicht wirklich gut im 3D drucken bin

    • @krytoxs4018
      @krytoxs4018 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      Man hört sehr den deutschen Akzent raus

  • @grimmdiy7282
    @grimmdiy7282 Pƙed 4 lety +6368

    Filament made out of failed print should be called "Failament".

    • @omkr0122
      @omkr0122 Pƙed 4 lety +42

      Good one!

    • @alexplorer
      @alexplorer Pƙed 4 lety +128

      Dad? Is that you?

    • @James-perez
      @James-perez Pƙed 4 lety +8

      *kluk* nice

    • @KapybaraKSP
      @KapybaraKSP Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Yes. Just.... yes.

    • @REDSIX
      @REDSIX Pƙed 4 lety +14

      @@alexplorer He's still out getting those cigarettes.

  • @shaneintegra
    @shaneintegra Pƙed 2 lety +1669

    Wish a system like this was cheaper. This should be a standard with everyone who uses 3D printers!

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Pƙed 2 lety +284

      Perhaps hobby spaces should set something like this up together and then all of the members can drop off their failed prints for recycling.

    • @1992Bwhite
      @1992Bwhite Pƙed 2 lety +184

      Makes me think, there could be a place for a business here...send us your failed prints and we offer a discount on recycled filament.

    • @danbee6407
      @danbee6407 Pƙed 2 lety +50

      This system is very rudimentary, I imagine building one would be pretty straight forward. Biggest hurdle would be temp control & engine speeds.

    • @shaneintegra
      @shaneintegra Pƙed 2 lety +12

      @@1992Bwhite yup! I imagine even a store front in a big city would even do good.

    • @DamnZodiak
      @DamnZodiak Pƙed 2 lety +25

      @@hedgehog3180 Damn, that's an awesome idea. Many printing enthusiasts, myself included, would gladly provide their scraps regardless of what they'd personally get out of it. I'm totally going to recommend this to my local maker space.

  • @ragingfroni
    @ragingfroni Pƙed 3 lety +404

    A few things as a plastic technician (im specialized in injection molding): you should be able to achive a black colour by adding about 2-3% clean powdered graphite. Ifyou dont want to add virgin material you should be able to use vibrations (maybe a rumblepack?) To loosen up the material for extruding. To reduce graining ect. And get a more homogenious filament i would try to sort the material either by spool(best way) or atleast by transparent/opake and light and dark colours

    • @attilasooky8792
      @attilasooky8792 Pƙed 3 lety +14

      I was going to comment this, except with graphene powder. I add graphene powder to SLA resin, although I haven't done any tests on its effect. Do you know?

    • @ragingfroni
      @ragingfroni Pƙed 3 lety +10

      @@attilasooky8792 i just know that black colour normally gets done with carbon and graphene seems like the easiest clean source of carbon i can think of

    • @wargex
      @wargex Pƙed 2 lety +14

      A rumble pack you say?
      Pulls out Nintendo 64 controller accessory.

    • @Kara_Kay_Eschel
      @Kara_Kay_Eschel Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@wargex Any small motor with a weight that is off center should work.

    • @wargex
      @wargex Pƙed 2 lety +5

      @@Kara_Kay_Eschel "Rumble Pack" was the actual proper name of the controller accessory. I understand how vibrators work.

  • @KaspersVen
    @KaspersVen Pƙed 3 lety +186

    4:18 lol at the black plastic strip that ignoreres the 5mm rule and yolo straight through the sieve.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt Pƙed 3 lety +25

      Hexagonal holes would help with this...some oversized parts up to 7mm are bound to slip through diagonally on a 5mm hole square grid. Hexagonal 5mm holes would only allow 5.7mm pieces if they perfectly slid into the corners. A little smaller than that and you guarantee nothing over 5 gets through.

    • @TheExstud
      @TheExstud Pƙed 2 lety

      @@VoltisArt No, it would not.

  • @moth.monster
    @moth.monster Pƙed 5 lety +2035

    I really like the trash bag khaki color actually

    • @KiR_3d
      @KiR_3d Pƙed 5 lety +32

      it looks quite interesting! Can be used to print some decor elements and things like earrings.

    • @aarong.4691
      @aarong.4691 Pƙed 5 lety +53

      it looks kinda like camo.

    • @hotaru8309
      @hotaru8309 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      I love it

    • @alexandrevaliquette1941
      @alexandrevaliquette1941 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      It's better than a regular plain color, I agree!

    • @vipul-pawar
      @vipul-pawar Pƙed 5 lety +5

      did u know khakhi is the name of colour which is similar to this one in Hindi language

  • @RcLifeOn
    @RcLifeOn Pƙed 5 lety +2151

    Next time I visit Germany I can drop of a container of failed prints.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Pƙed 5 lety +280

      Be my guest, Simon.

    • @foss2116
      @foss2116 Pƙed 5 lety +11

      @RCLLifeOn i can also recomend the DIY Extruder with awesome quality here on youtube czcams.com/video/zaIoMLO7cak/video.html

    • @dtesta
      @dtesta Pƙed 5 lety +2

      @RCLifeOn Simon! I can come to TrollhÀttan and pick it up :)

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 Pƙed 5 lety +4

      @@CNCKitchen beautiful man, not cheap enough yet.. I look at 3Dp ones :) but this is So good xx
      I post in our group for you xx

    • @flekkeny
      @flekkeny Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Container for sale :)))

  • @Stupidtigerz
    @Stupidtigerz Pƙed 3 lety +584

    I feel that it's not quite practical at the moment, but environmentally it's very much so worth it

    • @biopyramid0384
      @biopyramid0384 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      If you just have like a a spare bucket next to the printer just toss the failed pieces in and push them down a little then once it gets full look for this video in like a note app or something

    • @nateschmitz9827
      @nateschmitz9827 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      Why is it worth it environmentally? The filastruder uses electricity and pla is biodegradable...

    • @finnblackwood2124
      @finnblackwood2124 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      @@nateschmitz9827 PLA decomposes under specific conditions unlikely to be found in nature. It is technically biodegradable but not realistically. czcams.com/video/X_Gh-3PQhiE/video.html

    • @Stupidtigerz
      @Stupidtigerz Pƙed 2 lety +42

      @@nateschmitz9827 degradable, not biodegradable

    • @dangerous8333
      @dangerous8333 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@nateschmitz9827 Interesting perspective. I'll have to understand more on the subject to have an opinion on it.

  • @KillerBearsaw
    @KillerBearsaw Pƙed 2 lety +40

    This is one of the things that interested me most about 3dprinting. For the longest time i couldn't really deal with the idea of just wasting so many failed 3d prints. I hope we're able to make failed print recycle kits much more accessible so that they're viewed as an essential accessory rather than a costly solution.

    • @ChristopherJones16
      @ChristopherJones16 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Soon we will have 3d printers with hoppers that you load up with drinking bottles and prints with the freshly created filament. No need for rolls It just melts it twice.. once to melt the bottles which then falls through a heated pipe into the hotend which then heats it to the appropriate printing temp.

    • @petervansan1054
      @petervansan1054 Pƙed rokem

      who cares? PLA is literally milk

    • @dthegthompson6217
      @dthegthompson6217 Pƙed rokem

      @@ChristopherJones16 hi Christopher, please message me on this subject

    • @ChristopherJones16
      @ChristopherJones16 Pƙed rokem

      @@dthegthompson6217 I'm not sure how to message people on youtube.. I didnt know such a feature existed. Perhaps you can send me your email

  • @L3X369
    @L3X369 Pƙed 4 lety +140

    I watched this a long time ago, when I was only dreaming of having a printer, now i'm actually researching for ways of recicle filament and even make my own from scratch. People like you are road openers for people like me. Thanks for making such useful videos!

    • @johntamplin
      @johntamplin Pƙed 3 lety +6

      @Alexandru ... I've never heard the expression 'road opener' before. Very good, I shall be using that in the future.

    • @kraftaksvk
      @kraftaksvk Pƙed rokem

      saaame

    • @michael__5647
      @michael__5647 Pƙed rokem +1

      hey, did/do you have any success with Recycling?

    • @L3X369
      @L3X369 Pƙed rokem

      @@michael__5647 No, not yet...

    • @rogsolutions
      @rogsolutions Pƙed rokem

      ​@@L3X369 what have you tried? I'm looking at building a system for PET in remote areas of 3rd world countries

  • @shpadoinkle_wombat
    @shpadoinkle_wombat Pƙed 5 lety +448

    This kind of setup would be a great for hackerspaces as with amount of scraps from the whole community it would actually pay for itself.
    I would love a video or series of videos on "what can you do with 3D printing waste" exploring all the options that are available.

    • @nova_vista
      @nova_vista Pƙed 5 lety +22

      From an environmental standpoint, this should be the standard in all hackerspaces.

    • @etoile6216
      @etoile6216 Pƙed 5 lety +3

      I’m going to burn my PLA, it’s .mostly just co2 and water....and plant a tree if you are worried about climate change.

    • @aeroscience9834
      @aeroscience9834 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      etoile Trees are carbon neutral once they die. Do they not teach the carbon cycle at schools these days?

    • @DaveSmith-cp5kj
      @DaveSmith-cp5kj Pƙed 3 lety +4

      @@aeroscience9834 They can't teach the carbon cycle, otherwise kids would wise up about the global warming hoax and we can't have that. I remember back in high school when everyone was all about cow farts leading to the apocalypse because of Al Gore's fear mongering, our AP chem teacher outlined the equilibrium on why the "hole in the ozone layer" was impossible from a thermodynamic perspective (more UV radiation, more formation of ozone from diatomic oxygen).

    • @Weirdomanification
      @Weirdomanification Pƙed rokem

      @@aeroscience9834 Trees as individuals yes. However more forest cover equals a larger carbon sink. Also, forest soils sink carbon into the soil.

  • @donaldoconner
    @donaldoconner Pƙed 3 lety +120

    It would be cool to sort your scraps into different colors and feed them through so that your 3-D prints have distinct color stripes in them

    • @AnotherAshton
      @AnotherAshton Pƙed rokem +7

      i was thinking this too! like you can get two or three different colours such as blue, purple, pink and have a really cool filament

  • @warspirit9488
    @warspirit9488 Pƙed 3 lety +26

    Please do a detailed series on the construction of this device.

  • @ET_AYY_LMAO
    @ET_AYY_LMAO Pƙed 5 lety +206

    Me and my old man made a filament extruder that works slightly differently, we have digital caliper that constantly checks the diameter of the filament and then use a "puller" that pulls the filament till it has the exact diameter we set. This means that we can make filaments ranging from 3mm to 1.75mm with the same setup, we just change the desired filament diameter and an arduino takes care of the rest through constant measurements and a PID loop

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Pƙed 5 lety +49

      That's the proper way to do it and also how the professional machines do their job.

    • @user-lm1gl5dg5y
      @user-lm1gl5dg5y Pƙed 5 lety +41

      Maybe you can create a tutorial of how to DIY such?

    • @burtonkent4549
      @burtonkent4549 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Sounds great!

    • @Dimitri2014
      @Dimitri2014 Pƙed 5 lety +11

      Would definitely like to see a tutorial on "how to" for your set up as well as a parts list.

    • @pdeboer1987
      @pdeboer1987 Pƙed 5 lety

      thats cool.

  • @federicoreali9734
    @federicoreali9734 Pƙed 5 lety +772

    Trash bag khaki looks like the rare Statue of Liberty LEGO color

  • @modx5534
    @modx5534 Pƙed 3 lety +29

    I really dig the slight different coloration per layer of your "Trash Bag Khaki" failament :D.

  • @madsnygaard6444
    @madsnygaard6444 Pƙed rokem +2

    I admire your perseverance. Wish there was a new tool on the block for the less technically inclined (such as myself)

  • @lennydellavalle3683
    @lennydellavalle3683 Pƙed 4 lety +535

    I think reusing most things is a good thing. So I think what you're doing is very cool. And I look forward to more from you.

    • @acerrusm
      @acerrusm Pƙed 4 lety +13

      Yeah but not when the recycling cost exceeds 10 times the cost of the new filament. 1kg in 10 hours, how much electricity will be used?

    • @tuesss
      @tuesss Pƙed 4 lety +21

      @@acerrusm Probably very little. Filastruder's website states 60 W peak. So 10 h is 0.6 kWh in the worst case. In my country it'd cost about *$0.10 for 1 kg*.
      But even ignoring that, electricity can be produced from renewable resources unlike plastic filament. Moreover, wasted electricity usually turns into heat, while wasted plastic doesn't disappear magicallyÂč. Heat may be a bad thing if you recycle when it's hot outside, but it should be feasible for most people to wait with recycling until winter, in which case you can save on heating your home/office so that recycling itself is very cheap. Theoretically, you could capture the heat and use it for a different purpose (e.g. heating water) but that would be tricky and probably not worth the hassle considering how little electricity extruding uses compared to heating water.
      Âč except PLA because it is biodegradable in theory, but in practice it depends on the additives so I'd carefully check the dyes used before throwing it onto my compost pile

    • @Adiounys
      @Adiounys Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@tuesss But what about shredding, cleaning, dehydration, winder, food the dude consumes while operating the process....? I bet it's not very efficient to do this on small scale. Also "renewable resources" is BS. How you gonna renew sun energy? Creating energy from sun disturbs nature as well, because this energy you're taking will otherwise be used to warm up the soil, air, plants... which in turn would affect other things... Getting energy from water or any other source is also not free. If you say water is renewable why petroleum is not?

    • @MrVelociraptor75
      @MrVelociraptor75 Pƙed 4 lety +10

      @@Adiounys Clearly you're just trying to be anachronistic, but I'll humor you.
      The food the user consumes while running it, would be consumed anyway. We gotta live. So just, don't
      Shredding and the winder are all low powered items, the dehydrator will be slightly more 300-500W. These can all be powered by renewables, the same as the filament recycler.
      Everything Tues has said is correct. Energy can be generated (from low-emission sources), plastic is a waste and quite hazardous to the environment, if mishandled. Reusing that waste is a smart idea.
      Efficiency is a misnomer term too. You can have excellent efficiency, but still be wasteful. A perfect example is heat-exchangers (aka Air conditioners). Heat exchangers are often around 300% efficient. That's for every unit of energy you put into it, it can return 3 times that. Pretty good, right? But, we have so many A/Cs round the world, we are still using vast amounts of energy to power them, and often that energy goes to waste anyway (heating/cooling rooms without anyone in, leaking out open doors whatever). Heating and cooling can often be achieved passively, or via good design, reducing energy costs. So, while you may use a less efficient heater/cooler, you could achieve it with much, much less overall energy.
      Now to my point on that. Yes, larger scale recycling of plastic is more efficient... but it's not really being done. So, some recycling at home, at less efficiency, is still better than none at all. Capiche?
      Now onto your really ridiculous statements. Energy from the sun is considered free because it's a multi-billion year living object, that is going to do what it does, regardless of what the rest of the universe thinks. It will massively out last humankind so isn't worth factoring in.
      Sunlight hitting solar panels would only affect plant life, if we installed it directly over existing plants, blocking their sun. That's not the case, is it? The panel absorbs the heat too, so the air still receives it's due. I'm not sure why you'd want to heat these things up though?
      Petroleum isn't considered renewable, for the very reason that it can run out (we're already at far harder difficulties in extraction processes than we were even a decade or two ago - it will only get harder) and because it took hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years to decay and form into what we know of it now. We THEN have to refine it (more wasted energy) and THEN transport it. I could go on

    • @Adiounys
      @Adiounys Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@MrVelociraptor75 The food you need to conusme while laying in bed is not the same as when you move. But that was just to point out that there a many small factors which togateher may have significant impact on overall outcome.
      "Now to my point on that. Yes, larger scale recycling of plastic is more efficient... but it's not really being done."
      I thought there were recyclic plastic in large scale already...
      "Now onto your really ridiculous statements"
      What statements were ridiculous?
      "It will massively out last humankind so isn't worth factoring in."
      This is ridiculous statement - how you know that?
      "I'm not sure why you'd want to heat these things up though?"
      So you really didn't get my point. I don't "want" to.
      I was just saying that redirecting sun energy is affecting natural environment. The light that you turn into electricity is not turned into heat at the place. Changing air temperature creates wind.
      On small scale it's not visible but if you could image that half of the planet's surface is covered with solar panels, it can change the climat significantly, but it's really hard to predict.
      "Petroleum isn't considered renewable, for the very reason that it can run out"
      You can say the very same thing about the sun.
      "and because it took hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years to decay and form into what we know of it now"
      Frist of all we don't know it for sure.
      I'm not an astronomer but I just found out that star formation takes about 10 million years (astronomy.stackexchange.com/questions/156/how-long-does-it-take-to-produce-a-star-why-does-it-take-that-long).
      So you can say the same about the sun too, which saddly means your explanation failed.
      Now, I see whe are diggin into details but original poit was about sense of recyclic filament and no matter what, this technique is preety useleess for almost all users. Even if cost of recycled filament is little smaller, you still need to recycle a LOT of it just to compensate for the machines used in process. And there are more negative practical factors but I don't have more time to write about them.
      Saying all this I still think it's cool thing to do, but it's no more then a curio at this stage.

  • @wanderingsoul881
    @wanderingsoul881 Pƙed 5 lety +1992

    Lmao I don't even have a 3D printer. What am I doing here? 😂

    • @idiotom
      @idiotom Pƙed 5 lety +19

      Same

    • @ElizaShakiraMassani
      @ElizaShakiraMassani Pƙed 5 lety +81

      Curiosity? Also you have been watching CZcams too long and have gone down the “this looks interesting.” hole

    • @pawangkocheng1273
      @pawangkocheng1273 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      Well, i love people recycling stuff lol

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      Miss Weirdo same. But I really want to do this now 😂

    • @yaboi2944
      @yaboi2944 Pƙed 5 lety

      I’m a Christians that’s y

  • @Hopeinformer
    @Hopeinformer Pƙed 3 lety +32

    I would love to see an update on this one. I've been holding onto my failed prints too since this video was uploaded.

    • @ROBCORPSE18
      @ROBCORPSE18 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      Are you still holding them?

  • @basa1000
    @basa1000 Pƙed 3 lety +516

    Who else is watching even if they don’t have a 3D printer?

    • @modx5534
      @modx5534 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      here!

    • @maximkoneva6517
      @maximkoneva6517 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      A goose in a trench coat here

    • @kaboomwinn4394
      @kaboomwinn4394 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Wow you read my mind. Someday I may get a 3-d printing for my project but I was curious how I can recycle fragment.

    • @mhamohamed4425
      @mhamohamed4425 Pƙed 3 lety

      Me

    • @Tomatoe182
      @Tomatoe182 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      I think it's probably a bit of a sticking point for some of us that are wanting to get into 3D Printing, and fully understand that the first x amount of prints will most likely be unsuccessful / mess about prints and ideally would like to reuse them and not waste...

  • @JasonZnack
    @JasonZnack Pƙed 5 lety +259

    For more consistent color and composition you could do like the big manufacturers do and chop up your first extruded run into little even bits and then extrude it again. You could even do color mixing that way by separating your input colors first and batching them by themselves. Then you can add a ratio of colors to get something new. Definitely more work and time investment and probably beyond what a garage homebrew would want to mess with.

    • @ProtonOne11
      @ProtonOne11 Pƙed 5 lety +20

      I immediately had the same idea. Why not make your own PLA pellets from the scraps first, and then extrude that into a filament?
      My brother makes and sells pasta on a medium scale and the machine to make them works on a similar principle, with an auger that pushes the dough thru a die that makes the different shapes (like flat noodles, spaghettis, macaronis...). On the die there is a rotating knife that spins at just the right speed to cut the pasta the length you want. I'm pretty shure there are other possible ways to cut the pellets at the extruder, the pasta is already pretty hard when it gets out of the "nozzle" and it does not stick. So maybe using a shedder that cuts the cooled down rough filament into pellets is easyer to do with plastic than trying to cut it directly at the nozzle.

    • @KieranShort
      @KieranShort Pƙed 5 lety +10

      exactly. I think this would also improve colour consistency too if you have a huge amount of random colours being recycled (and want a uniform overall colour at the end).

    • @among-us-99999
      @among-us-99999 Pƙed 5 lety +12

      You would have to use ABS for that, the PLA polymer chains break down too quickly. One time recycled PLA is much weaker than fresh PLA; this effect is not really noticeable with ABS.

    • @ProtonOne11
      @ProtonOne11 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      @@among-us-99999 Yeah, that could be a problem. Mixing in some fresh pellets with your DIY pellets might help to keep the properties in the printable range. (Question is, how much fresh pellets would you need...) And having an extruder that uses more brute force and less temperature for the scrap-to-pellet extruder would probably help to keep the polymer in better shape too.

    • @among-us-99999
      @among-us-99999 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      ƞӜƷ the printability is not really a problem. There is pure PET Filament available; it is just a little bit more brittle.
      The glycol is added to prevent it from crystallizing when it melts and solidifies many times.

  • @JamesSmith-dn8lb
    @JamesSmith-dn8lb Pƙed 5 lety +325

    My scrap abs prints go in a jar with acetone to make abs glue.

    • @Bednar121
      @Bednar121 Pƙed 4 lety +16

      How strong is it? What materials can it stick together?
      I print a lot in ABS, so I'd be glad if I could find a use for all those supports and other scraps...

    • @Hellsong89
      @Hellsong89 Pƙed 4 lety +34

      ​@@Bednar121 Well that is pretty hard to answer but lets give it a try. First tools i use for this are
      1. Big container of acetone bought in bulk for cheap price as main storage to refill smaller one.
      2. Smallest container size with easiest to open method that works for you, as you will be opening this very often
      3. Glass container with metal cap that is air tight and over time you notice if seal material is acetone proof. Best one so far has been Maille mustard container, but its shape leaves things to be desired.
      4. Injection needle where you scribe the end with file to create fault line, being EXTREMELY CAREFUL with ridiculously sharp end!!
      (its sharp as scalpel so it easily goes trough to bone if you fuck up, so you might want to dull it first with sand paper or sanding stone to be safe, also as side note if you need sterile knife to open swollen boil for instance to drop the pressure and empty already infected content your self, injection needles end does the work, long as you know what you are doing).
      Then just use pliers to snap the end and if possible flatten it and put inside some other metal scrap so no one else hurts them selfs with it and remove sharp/ rough edges with sand paper and you have small nozzle to inject acetone accurately where you need it.
      Also syringe of you desired size, though 1ml syringe has been enough and it lasts long time as its pretty chemical resistant.
      Now if you have simple layer separation on print that you can open and close by compressing and if all possible open it up fully, just apply acetone on the surfaces, give it bit time to soften the abs and then close it and its will be glued with in few minutes if plastic got sticky enough. Though as side note try to limit how much gets inside the print you have lower than 100% infill as it takes long time for acetone get out from the structure and it might even soften the whole print, though this can be useful too as you essentially acetone vapor bath prints inside surfaces.
      If you have layer separation and warping then step one is as mentioned and then you can fill the gap with acetone, ABS putty/glue, but in incrementally as it takes time for acetone to gas out from the ABS. Putting too thick of a layer will cause surface to stiffen up, so gas cant escape easily and then you have gas pockets that expand. Quickest way to do get around this is to put on small quantity of paste, show little torch for it to burn out the gas inside and push the material back in its place right after. Repeat this enough times to fill the gap and finally smooth the surface by using the needle and applying acetone little by little into the area. With this i have saved countless failed prints, though surface most likely will turn bit of while so i would suggest you spray paint the part if its looks are important
      For gluing two different prints together pretty much same rules apply as previously mentioned.
      For gluing different materials together, well my printer is made from PLA and X-axis end stop adjuster i made from peace of failed print that i pretty much just melted and compressed with anvil, let it cool down, shaped with rasp, drill and tap for the M5 bolt and then just smooth the surfaces with acetone, let it stiffen and again with acetone melted the surface and pressed it to PLA nozzle carrier. After a hour it was stiff enough to use and has lasted 10 homings and 20 hours of print and i cant separate them with reasonable finger force. I could test this, but i dont have any other materials at the moment to test this with at the moment, but i need to look into it in future. What i theorize is that with different materials it depends on how liquid it is so it can fill minor holes and bumps effectively and how porous the materials are. You should be able to glue wood together, but i havent tested it. If you have some utility in mind just try small test peace and see your self, just make sure its gassed off completely before tress testing.
      For ABS glue/putty i use rougly 1:1 mix. Supports melt much faster due large surface area, so you have batch of putty in hour to two hours. Stored putty will eventually gas out even in the jar acetone out and stiffen with in a month, but try to get the stiffen mass off from the glass surface so new acetone can sweep between the ABS and glass increasing surface area and you should have it ready for use next day/ on evening.
      As safet precaution do note that acetone wapors are not best thing in the world for you body and skin contact is not that good thing ether. Your skin will dry and acetone will enter to your blood stream from said skin contact so it should be avoided if all possible. Back when i was working on car shop we had relatively smart/dumb system where spray guns were cleaned with acetone and skin contact caused me to get drunk/above average toxication, with huge head ache and with out the doubt it killed 20 IQ points while at it, so be careful, use in ventilated space and avoid skin contact.
      This is just what i have found out. I use to build custom airsoft guns and i picked this method before i started to print parts.

    • @joemulkerins5250
      @joemulkerins5250 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      100th like 😉

    • @Gilmar.Oliveira
      @Gilmar.Oliveira Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Filip Bednarowski please, follow the answer you’ve got.

    • @arman4chok
      @arman4chok Pƙed 4 lety

      @@Bednar121 deadly strong

  • @Denzanmaru1
    @Denzanmaru1 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    Looks like a lot of work that is well worth it. I really like the look of Trash Bag Khaki and you prevented all of that plastic from ending up in the ocean for a little while longer

  • @DraakjeYoblama
    @DraakjeYoblama Pƙed 3 lety +89

    Is there some kind of service that can recycle old filaments for you? They could sell it for cheaper and it would be useful for prototyping when the colour isn't very important

    • @donnyferris5521
      @donnyferris5521 Pƙed 2 lety +14

      I was thinking the exact same thing. Not only is this expensive but the cost of the shredder, the dehydrator, and the mixer make it even more so. Not to mention that it’s seriously time consuming. I hope such a service exists and that someone who knows of one will respond to your question. If there is none, there’s definitely a business opportunity there - depending on the economics of producing the filament.

    • @zkeepah
      @zkeepah Pƙed 2 lety +12

      Fusion filaments does, check their site

    • @sashasscribbles
      @sashasscribbles Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@zkeepah Awesome! I'm glad that service exists

    • @shawnpitman876
      @shawnpitman876 Pƙed rokem

      @@donnyferris5521 That looks like a pretty cheap model dehydrator, looks exactly like a model I can get at walmart for $40.

  • @Eledan88341
    @Eledan88341 Pƙed 4 lety +11

    I used to work in a plastic injection-molding factory (making storage buckets). A lot of what you worked through is exactly how those systems worked in the first place. This was really cool to see. Thank you!

  • @aurelienclair4465
    @aurelienclair4465 Pƙed 5 lety +276

    I think a better idea would be to have a "professional " filament producing line at a hacker-space where people can produce their filament .

    • @AS-ug2vq
      @AS-ug2vq Pƙed 4 lety +8

      It's not that expensive to build your own: medium.com/endless-filament/make-your-filament-at-home-for-cheap-6c908bb09922

    • @antoniocialfi77
      @antoniocialfi77 Pƙed 3 lety +6

      the only issue with that would be enforcing material consistency only PLA, or only ABS to each filament machine

  • @kentonrune6621
    @kentonrune6621 Pƙed 3 lety +81

    You get ONE 3d printer for your birthday and the whole recommendedation section in youtube is full with 3d printer stuffđŸ˜łđŸ€Ł

    • @hyperjohn6627
      @hyperjohn6627 Pƙed 3 lety

      lol same

    • @millionscat4882
      @millionscat4882 Pƙed 3 lety

      I actually looked this up 😀 I already failed so many projects I have a little tub it’s only been a week

    • @f4n627
      @f4n627 Pƙed 3 lety

      CZcams is hearing your request

    • @nharber9837
      @nharber9837 Pƙed 2 lety

      Same! I'm getting a resin printer so I don't even know why I'm here. I do want a filament printer too, though.

  • @MalamikArt
    @MalamikArt Pƙed 3 lety +6

    I hope this becomes a thing! This is so important! Thank you for doing this.

  • @danielsmullen3223
    @danielsmullen3223 Pƙed 5 lety +49

    This is a great video on a great topic. I would love to see a cost benefit calculation with lots of graphs in your usual style, showing when it makes sense to accumulate more scrap and mix virgin material versus begin recycling. Also, adding extra instrumentation to your setup to automatically tune process parameters seems like a really important thing to investigate.

  • @madsam7582
    @madsam7582 Pƙed 5 lety +96

    The mixed colours don't matter if you are making a paintable miniature!
    So I'd use that.

    • @jackietrades7731
      @jackietrades7731 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      a neutral grey is better to paint anyways

    • @Lolleren686
      @Lolleren686 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      and i actually like the trash bag khaki he made - i like to paint over grey/green instead of black xD

  • @Die-CastMetal
    @Die-CastMetal Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I’d like to build industrial machines for this purpose and set up a factory on several acres of land meant to do nothing but process recyclables.
    We are at the ground floor of a new industry that is about to explode and recycling already manufactured products to clean up our environment will be top on our list of “things to do”. Anyone involved in this industry now will not only make a lot of money in the future but will be praised for helping humanity.

  • @kiradaniels475
    @kiradaniels475 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I love this! I try to recycle everything possible when crafting, thank you for sharing.

  • @tHaH4x0r
    @tHaH4x0r Pƙed 5 lety +51

    I think the non-uniform colour actually looks kinda nice.

    • @aurorahall8126
      @aurorahall8126 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      You could do like an varigation with the colors and make a rather beautiful extrusion.

  • @olx222
    @olx222 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    Sandcasting with lost PLA is truly amazing to me. Everything you use can easily be recycled. You print out your desired casting shape in PLA, make a mold with it, melt out the PLA, melt your metal and pour it into the mold. The scraps of the metalcasting and the melted waste PLA can be reused to a very high degree for the same process. As a mechanical engineer I can't help but be really excited about this extremely low material cost to hobby projects and prototyping concepts.

  • @BuhdaPunk
    @BuhdaPunk Pƙed 3 lety +23

    Suggestion, First extrude at 3mm. Chop the 3mm filament into nurdles. This should mix the color better on the second extrusion for 1.75mm

    • @davesmith9325
      @davesmith9325 Pƙed rokem +5

      You don't even need to chop it .. just make a big reel of 3mm as the first pass ti generate a feed material that is contiguous (unlike the shredded knurdles) .. then feed that through a 1.75 extruder for the second pass very much the same way metal wires are pulled making the diameter smaller each time. I think this could give a very consistent result. Actually you could do both steps in a single machine and skip spooling tbe 3mm if you make the machine a bit more complex

    • @PeterAuto1
      @PeterAuto1 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      but that doesn't help with the color, you have to mix it again, for it

  • @theheadone
    @theheadone Pƙed 5 lety +35

    hah, I love the modified paper shredder and your other homebrew techniques, well done sir!

  • @colinschabel
    @colinschabel Pƙed 4 lety +150

    To shred better
    1. Melt down the scrap
    2. Pour into a mold or press into a mold if it is play dough consistency.
    3. The mold should be a shape that is easy to chop
    4. you come up with the best shape.
    Or you could easily chop the new extrusion.
    Another idea is to have a filament recycling business. Buy scraps from people in your city and sell the recycled product. Economy of scale could make it viable. People could ship scrap to you if they have enough.
    Look at a pasta extruder. The ones that make small sized pasta . There is a spinning knife that cuts the extrusion as it comes out

    • @WannabeCanadianDev
      @WannabeCanadianDev Pƙed 4 lety +18

      The issue here is I think polymers lose strength each time its heated, so you don't wanna reheat it too many times.

    • @cleancooking
      @cleancooking Pƙed 4 lety +5

      @@WannabeCanadianDev True when not compressed

    • @jotajmg
      @jotajmg Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@WannabeCanadianDev also, if you heat that sort of material excessively, it can burn and produce toxic gases, so it would require quite "The temperature control system" for that heater.

    • @marc_frank
      @marc_frank Pƙed 4 lety +2

      you don't even have to buy it

    • @BankruptGreek
      @BankruptGreek Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@WannabeCanadianDev so how many times could you reuse the same filament with this recycling method.

  • @rabbitadventurous9441
    @rabbitadventurous9441 Pƙed rokem

    I thought the color of the filament looks really nice. The slight ununiformed look is the cherry on top. Chef kiss!

  • @onomatopoeidia
    @onomatopoeidia Pƙed 4 lety +3

    It’s a great effort. I really hope my young son’s world is one where the recyclables all get sorted in-house and sit in a storage system at home waiting for re-manufacturing into all the possible things we need day in day out. Ideal.

  • @Lamplighterone
    @Lamplighterone Pƙed 5 lety +72

    I'm sure it's worth it if (We) as creators put as much into it as we do our printers and other tools. That looks like what your doing. a good systematic approach. We cannot just create and not be concerned with the waste.

    • @Chazz155511
      @Chazz155511 Pƙed 5 lety +6

      On the flip side when looking at injection molding, they go through thousands of failed parts when warming the machine up and getting the molds right. Your 3D printer is a machine that wastes very little in comparison to industrial manufacturing. My point being is that, banning straws, or spending exuberant amounts of money/energy/time on an inefficient process may not be the BEST way you could be helping the environment.

    • @darkshadowsx5949
      @darkshadowsx5949 Pƙed 5 lety +4

      @@Chazz155511 as a past injection mold machinist i agree. Plus all the wasted material from the sprue channels even in normal operation.
      i had to sit by an injection mold machine to cut the flashing off so we can get some parts to the client then take the mold back to improve it and remove/reduce flashing.

    • @otm646
      @otm646 Pƙed 5 lety +1

      Your time is worth something, recycling prints is not savings you or the world anything.

  • @Zahlenteufel1
    @Zahlenteufel1 Pƙed 5 lety +18

    It might be interesting to see a setup where the scraps are extruded into a 4-5mm diameter "filament" and then immediately chopped off with a rotating blade (while still soft) to make pellets that can then be used to feed the real filament extruder. I think this might help with consistency and it could also allow for bigger input scrap, maybe even a system where you don't have to shred it at all or only minimally since for the first extrusion part consistency does not matter.
    I'm also very interested in a DIY version of this; I don't want to spend more on filament recycling than I did on my printer...

  • @inkvisio6600
    @inkvisio6600 Pƙed 3 lety

    Thx 4 info, i`v looked up over 10 vids about extruders, yours the best of them, U r the smart kid, dont stop and move forward !

  • @eatbe4n9ne70
    @eatbe4n9ne70 Pƙed 3 lety

    Thanks for this!! I had quite a bunch of failed prints and I did not know what to do and didn't want to throw it away, very much appreciated.

  • @RetroPlus
    @RetroPlus Pƙed 5 lety +11

    That's pretty impressive that you can actually get a useable filament out of it, that's actually very good. In the future there will be more affordable techniques, this is very good recycling.

  • @WayneMcCormick
    @WayneMcCormick Pƙed 5 lety +120

    I like the idea of recycling filament. I do think there needs to be some alternatives for the hardware to do it. $500 is ok for a person or small company that is printing a lot, but its too steep for a hobbyist.

    • @yyh1002
      @yyh1002 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      Wayne McCormick Even old clearance filament from Chinese manufacturers under 5 dollars per kilo has significantly better quality than homemade. The only advantage of recycling filament at home is reducing land fill.

    • @baschz
      @baschz Pƙed 5 lety +23

      @@yyh1002 'only' can be enough. not everything has to come down to money, I hope.

    • @0xbenedikt
      @0xbenedikt Pƙed 5 lety +5

      PLA is completely biodegradable though and disposing of that is not an ecological problem.

    • @thebman80
      @thebman80 Pƙed 5 lety +11

      That $500 would be better spent getting a low end resin printer. Honestly $500 is a total rip off for that stuff the parts alone to build it might barely add up to $200 when all is said and done.

    • @KegRaider
      @KegRaider Pƙed 5 lety +3

      Maybe if i had a dual extrusion setup, whereby i could use my recycled plastics as just support materials, that would satisfy my quest to reduce my carbon footprint as such. I agree though, for the hobbyist who prints less than 1kg per month, its just not worth the cost.

  • @AnanthakumarBalakrishnan
    @AnanthakumarBalakrishnan Pƙed rokem +1

    Bro you are doing really a good job. This thing is necessary for the world because after 3d printer invention, the plastic pollution is too high with your technique we can reduce. I hope you invent something like this which is helpful for mother nature.

  • @BMCESystems
    @BMCESystems Pƙed 3 lety

    Beautiful. Effort appreciated not for money maybe but rather for conservation. Bravo!

  • @GodOrbital
    @GodOrbital Pƙed 4 lety +12

    I'd love to hear more about the energy involved, to shred, melt and extrude new filament. Running everything on solar panels would awesome in the sense that you could imagine printing "tools" to break them down after, recycle them and print different tools after. Do you have any idea about the efficiency ratio? 100g of scrap can make 100g of filament at the end?

  • @wampapup
    @wampapup Pƙed 4 lety +4

    Cool video, thanks! I don't know if anybody said this yet but perhaps as a last step try putting the sifted chunks through a coffee grinder on the coarsest setting. They're designed for creating regulated size particles without applying too much heat.

  • @jacoblansman8147
    @jacoblansman8147 Pƙed rokem +1

    This video might be 3 years old but I'm finding it (and your follow-up video, which I saw first) both helpful in terms of the viability of recycling old prints. I've only been 3d printing for about 6 months but I knew as soon as I got the printer that I'd have some leftover plastic or failed models and I would absolutely find a way to recycle them - without any research of any sort into the community and whether it was something that had been done before. I keep all my failed prints and any scrap plastic larger than 2sq cm in size locked in a plastic storage tub which originally held my toy trains (or my Lego) from before I started living on my own and donated all my old toys.

  • @Battle437
    @Battle437 Pƙed 3 lety

    I'm big about reusing materials. Bottles for window gardens, malfunctioning electronics for arduino projects, broken tools for modification... Ect. I LOVE this idea! Most excellent video 😍. Hypothetically, you have a huge project, all you need is a prototype part to adjust, no way this is a finished part. Electricity is the only real cost. The cost of time is paid in knowledge. đŸ€”

  • @adamsmetana2704
    @adamsmetana2704 Pƙed 5 lety +169

    Can you try recycling PET bottles? That would be really cool

    • @UloPe
      @UloPe Pƙed 5 lety +42

      Adam Smetana unfortunately that’s cost prohibitive in Germany since there is a 25ct. deposit on every pet bottle.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Pƙed 5 lety +44

      Exactly, I have to visit some Austrian friends soon and take some bottles back home.

    • @demacherius1
      @demacherius1 Pƙed 5 lety +3

      @@CNCKitchen I can hook you up with some

    • @LanceThumping
      @LanceThumping Pƙed 5 lety +16

      @@CNCKitchen You could always see if a fan will send you some PET bottles. For example, they could find one that is relatively cylindrical cut off the top and bottom, then slit the sides to make them into sheets of plastic. That would be pretty cheap/easy to mail then.

    • @AndrewEbling
      @AndrewEbling Pƙed 5 lety +17

      CNC Kitchen would absolutely love a video on this. I don’t produce a lot of PLA waste but love the idea of home recycling PET. I would imagine bottles would be easier to crush and then shred to small pieces than failed prints.
      Here in the uk there is no deposit. This is what would sell me a filastruder kit!

  • @AstroCharlie
    @AstroCharlie Pƙed 5 lety +15

    This is awesome. I'd love to see a diameter sensor and proper tensioning system. You could really be more aggressive with the flow rates if you had better feedback.

  • @sonnynguyen135
    @sonnynguyen135 Pƙed 3 lety

    What a smart guy! Very impressed with your work

  • @chanyy6838
    @chanyy6838 Pƙed 3 lety +34

    6:53 “Dad why did you name me this way”

  • @sourcererseven3858
    @sourcererseven3858 Pƙed 3 lety +30

    Have you worked on this some more? One idea that came to mind to solve the shredding problem was to not shred the plastic at all, but making your own pellets. Melt it all together in your oven (you can mix it up while you're at it to get a uniform color, this also gets rid of any water and lots of the dirt, though you end up with the gunk accumulating on top, just like when casting metal) and run it through a "gravity-powered" extruder (basically a heated metal funnel) with a rotating blade underneath that cuts chunks off as they exit the nozzle (inspired by a play-doh machine 😅). These pellets need to cool off enough during their fall into your bucket to solidify, but that shouldn't be a big problem. If it is, let them fall through a piece of pipe with a fan at the bottom (blowing in from the side through a T-intersection) that blows air upwards. Slows down their fall and cools them at the same time.
    I just worry that the newly formed pellets will just stick to the blade instead of falling into the wind tunnel...

    • @emkay1182
      @emkay1182 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      The problem here is: the more often u heat plastic up, the shorter are the C chains ..

    • @ChristopherJones16
      @ChristopherJones16 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@emkay1182 perhaps a binding agent can be added.. he used new pellets but that to me isnt too practical.. it would be ideal to find a cheaper solution.. perhaps a liquid.. like a glue/resin compound that when dried isnt brittle. Most likely adding fresh pellets would be the only solution but who knows.

    • @combo1184
      @combo1184 Pƙed rokem +1

      you would still need to shred it because more massive parts will take longer to melt, causing inconsistent duration of heating

    • @SnowOrchid5076_Illustrations
      @SnowOrchid5076_Illustrations Pƙed rokem

      Not a 3d printer person but love the engineering and science aspect. Can not the pellets slide down a "marble run" type of trough to add more cooling time and bounce off an angled base to add a few final seconds and air exposure to the collection bin? The fan(s) for the collection bin can be placed behind angled base and the beads don't jam up the blades above a max collection level line?

  • @clvianna
    @clvianna Pƙed 5 lety +11

    Excellent video! Let me suggest some ideas that could improve your results. My first suggestion is a residual classification criteria, not only by the polymer nature, but also by it's color (or color group). It will produce a much more homogeneous result. To avoid an excessive amount of residous, a periodic fragmentation rotine may be necessary.
    Add a fresh polymer was a clever idea, like it is made successful in the glass industry. I hope made some constructive contribution.

  • @christopherguerriero1812
    @christopherguerriero1812 Pƙed 3 lety

    I love the character the recycled pla brings to the prints

  • @jvlog5727
    @jvlog5727 Pƙed 3 lety

    This is great!!! This is going to be a project of mine later down the road. For now I’ll keep old scraps!

  • @spqrjack2941
    @spqrjack2941 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    Hey, thx for the info, it's awesome that It is possible to recicle filaments.
    Could you make a strength comparisson next? Like bought filament vs DIY filament vs recicled?

  • @KaptainRadishOrSmth
    @KaptainRadishOrSmth Pƙed 4 lety +7

    "Trash Bag Khaki" got a pretty good laugh out of me, thank you

  • @thenextlayer
    @thenextlayer Pƙed rokem +1

    WOW, 3.9m views, SO COOL that so many people are interested in recycling

  • @lalocandiera6530
    @lalocandiera6530 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Recycling is always a good thing, well done!

  • @geniumme2502
    @geniumme2502 Pƙed 5 lety +30

    Yes very worth the effort! what we need is a consumer version of this!
    please do more in this direction ^.^

    • @hakont.4960
      @hakont.4960 Pƙed 4 lety

      There is actually a machine you can buy that does this, but it's quite expensive. Might be worth it for companies that do a lot of 3D printing.

    • @X3msnake
      @X3msnake Pƙed 4 lety

      @@hakont.4960 Lookup Precious Plastic Open Project

    • @AS-ug2vq
      @AS-ug2vq Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Go DIY: medium.com/endless-filament/make-your-filament-at-home-for-cheap-6c908bb09922

  • @user-rm2bm6lf1s
    @user-rm2bm6lf1s Pƙed 5 lety +8

    This video inspired me to do this project! Haha. Oh also try recycle the pet bottle or add a color pigment too. That would be soooo cool. Love your vid btw.

  • @frankward3794
    @frankward3794 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    This is awesome, I'll definitely be trying my hand at building a DIY version!Loving the channel!

  • @dondiezel
    @dondiezel Pƙed 3 lety

    I like the engaging questions you asked in the end

  • @bobthecannibal1
    @bobthecannibal1 Pƙed 4 lety +44

    "Precious plastic". They have open source shredder designs you might be interested in.

    • @urugulu1656
      @urugulu1656 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      good source indeed

    • @GreggStaley
      @GreggStaley Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Was going to be my suggestion too. Their shredder design pretty much would take out the blender and paper shredder and do it all. As long as you can find the motors and can build everything!

  • @icebluscorpion
    @icebluscorpion Pƙed 5 lety +6

    Hey CNC Kitchen pro tip: built a singel component Static mixing tube before the nossle, then the plastic will get more uniform out of the nossle

  • @groundskeeper5292
    @groundskeeper5292 Pƙed rokem +1

    I love the color! There's people out there making filament from recycled plastic bottles, which I think are mostly PET. Not sure if some of that could be mixed with the PLA. The bottle filament is made from running a strip of plastic bottle through an extruder, so there's some uniformity to begin with, and less mess, but still some prep is required. Stick with yours. Great work. Nice video too!

  • @ChrisVranos
    @ChrisVranos Pƙed 2 lety

    This was very cool. Brilliant setup and problem solving on your part. Of course all this points to the conclusion that recycling filament for individual use is extremely impractical, but the video was such great research, so I'm glad I got to see the whole process.

  • @ivanovp
    @ivanovp Pƙed 5 lety +3

    Another great video! Congrats for the first roll of StefaMent. I would love to see if this machine works with PET bottles. That would be real recycling.

  • @735rob
    @735rob Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Very nicely done. Would love to see an update to this and if you still use this set up and what improvements you have made since this video.

  • @davejack8973
    @davejack8973 Pƙed 2 lety

    was actually doing research on vapor smoothing for PLA ... but this was super useful to find U GAINED A SUB SIR!

  • @Se9n.
    @Se9n. Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    Great video, I've been using the Polyformer for over a year and love it. To prep the bottle I've used my microwave, I put the a splash of water in the bottle then add the lid and microwave it for 30 seconds the steam will expand and perfectly soften the plastic. When done run it under water for a sec then let the steam out, I put the tip in the water so steam can cool down fast. Then run water inside the bottle to cool it down. Dry it out before cutting

  • @ThatBum42
    @ThatBum42 Pƙed 5 lety +125

    Another way to 3D print on the cheap is to use weed wacker line. You can get a shitton of the stuff for peanuts. It's nylon so the resulting quality is quite nice.

    • @dickwhittington7321
      @dickwhittington7321 Pƙed 4 lety +18

      Seriously, does that work?

    • @ziad_jkhan
      @ziad_jkhan Pƙed 4 lety +19

      @@dickwhittington7321 As long as the diameter fits, your printer can print at temperatures above 260degrees and the line hasn't absorbed too much moisture in which case you can always look up ways to dry them back before printing

    • @ziad_jkhan
      @ziad_jkhan Pƙed 4 lety +11

      P.S I've had NO experience with it myself and I'm just spurring out whatever I gathered from elsewhere on the web

    • @bobbybologna3029
      @bobbybologna3029 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Someone try it

    • @GGigabiteM
      @GGigabiteM Pƙed 4 lety +9

      @@dickwhittington7321 Printing weed trimmer twine is difficult because its often saturated with moisture and not a uniform thickness. Another issue that came up within the last year is that the manufacturers of the stuff stopped making round twine and started making it in the shape of a pentagon, making it very difficult for the extruder to grab properly. I'm sure it cuts weeds better, but makes it worse for printing with.
      I've tried printing with it before and had bad results. I had lots of problems with under-extrusion and pops due to the moisture flashing to steam in the nozzle. It also eventually clogged the nozzle up and I had to soak it in denatured alcohol for a week to get it unblocked.
      If you could find some round trimmer line and put it in a vacuum desiccator to remove the moisture, it may work fine if you dialed in the settings right.

  • @hmauroy
    @hmauroy Pƙed 5 lety +3

    Great video! How does the nonconsistent width of the extruded filament affect over/underextrusion? A short video about that would be helpful. Keep up the good work Stefan!

  • @blazedeku7333
    @blazedeku7333 Pƙed rokem

    Finally! A method to give failed builds a second life! I've been looking for something like this!

  • @soundspark
    @soundspark Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    I have just installed a Stealthburner toolhead, the black parts were made from Filastruder recycled plastic. Overextruded a bit but with a bit of force everything went together well.

  • @ilovemyhonda250ex
    @ilovemyhonda250ex Pƙed 5 lety +7

    I worked in a factory running industrial extruders for a couple months so this is a pretty neat video for me lol, the big ones aren't much different.

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn Pƙed 4 lety +1

      I assume they have better control on the filament width? How do they do that?

    • @AS-ug2vq
      @AS-ug2vq Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@walkinmn checkout my blog: medium.com/endless-filament/make-filament-extruder-for-465-bbc0e8a74e74

    • @mackma1598
      @mackma1598 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@walkinmn our extruder machine can control the diameter tolerance around +-0.02-0.03mm

  • @dksaevs
    @dksaevs Pƙed 3 lety +6

    Recycling my PLA scraps is like making bio diesel from the oil i use to fry my food, i just don't eat enough fried food. but if i go to a couple of local restaurants and get their oil too, now its becoming more worthwhile. So maybe a co-op of 3D print enthusiasts all putting in their scraps and selling it as recycled PLA at 1/2 market price or donating to the 3D volunteers printing PPE headgear.
    A possible solution ror holding the size would be to employ an air knife or even a fan at the proper distance from the extruder to stiffen the PLA just as its 1.75mm (it will shrink more).
    The last little extruder i worked on had a 2500HP (1850KW) motor and pumped out 5000 LBs (2250 KG) of acrylic polymer per hour 24/7 350 d/y.

    • @jackietrades7731
      @jackietrades7731 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      exactly my thoughts. fry places used to (might still?) PAY recyclers to take it so free ++ material cost

  • @solarpunk9994
    @solarpunk9994 Pƙed rokem

    I really want to build a 3d print farm with a recycling plant attached this video gave me alot to think about as far as how absolutely critical sorting and cleaning would be

  • @derekpeace7668
    @derekpeace7668 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    That colour that you produced is a really nice shade of sage.

  • @beschi2340
    @beschi2340 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    StefaMent - best filament name ever! Ganz großes Kino! 👍😄

  • @wwindsunrain
    @wwindsunrain Pƙed 2 lety +9

    Thank you for showing this. This is really nice work. Two questions: Have you had a chance to try recycling pva? And, what if you melted the entire batch and used some sort of press to extrude? Maybe you wouldn't need to shred the scraps. Keep the entire setup in vacuum so you're not fighting air pressure and then it will automatically be dried for you. Just a thought, I haven't tried anything.

  • @dr.xd_eceptive7792
    @dr.xd_eceptive7792 Pƙed 3 lety

    Yes it's a great effort and one of the kind .. well appreciated

  • @mobilesuit92
    @mobilesuit92 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    Great effort with the recycling! I’ll be looking forward to create my own recycling filament system too! Would love to watch a video on how you did the recycling system very much! Thank you mate!

  • @garymuller9771
    @garymuller9771 Pƙed 3 lety +8

    Es sind nicht viele gute deutsche CZcamsr da draußen. Es freut mich wieder einen gefunden zu haben. Well done.

    • @zekiz774
      @zekiz774 Pƙed 2 lety

      Stimmt nicht. TechAltar, Kurzgesagt und LiveOverflow um ein paar gute internationale Deutsche CZcamsr zu nennen. Es gibt eine Menge gute deutsche CZcamsr.

    • @garymuller9771
      @garymuller9771 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Ob eine Menge groß oder klein erscheint hĂ€ngt davon ab womit du sie vergleichst. Relativ zu dem MĂŒllberg den Deutsche CZcamsr produzieren, sind die von dir aufgezĂ€hlten CZcams-Channel und sicherlich auch weitere, die ebenfalls hochwertigen Content produzieren, nicht viel.

    • @CNCKitchen
      @CNCKitchen  Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Vielen Dank!

  • @WDMurphy
    @WDMurphy Pƙed 3 lety

    Love the color and nonuniformity of the color too.

  • @moisesaramos3229
    @moisesaramos3229 Pƙed 3 lety

    I think it's cool enough you are taking ownership of your waste and recycleling rathen than trashing. Seriously shows a good aspect of at home 3D printing.

  • @FedericoLucchi
    @FedericoLucchi Pƙed 3 lety +8

    Very interesting! I think that using water to cool down the filament as soon as it leaves the "filastruder" might improve stability and speed. Also, a much bigger heating device might simplify the process as larger plastic pieces can be used. Another system might be required to get a constant material flow, maybe some kind of submerged pump...

    • @philipershler420
      @philipershler420 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      I have no idea how hard it would be to drive the accumulated moisture out of the filament.

  • @JoelRehra
    @JoelRehra Pƙed 5 lety +4

    Ohh my that fan with cutoff blades almost gave me a heart atack :O
    For an RC-pilot... man this is torture! ;)

  • @wiktorszymczak4760
    @wiktorszymczak4760 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    I think its quite useful for all those proof of concept prints made just to throw them away.

  • @codytheisen5655
    @codytheisen5655 Pƙed 3 lety

    Just had this pop up in my recommendations (guess I kinnda asked for it after doing a few dozen searches about 3D printing over the last three days).
    But I have to say that I love the concept of this! Probably would get into something like this but the set-up required seems a bit over my head but I would love something like this if a proper/streamlined machine/set-up was made for this and I love the idea of recycling old otherwise useless prints/plastic. I hope to see more from this project in the future (if their hasn't already been improvements it)

  • @jmaghan2770
    @jmaghan2770 Pƙed 5 lety +3

    good content, thanks for very detailed information.

  • @louiefriesen
    @louiefriesen Pƙed 4 lety +13

    You could sort the filament into different colours, and then you might have a more consistent texture.

    • @alexanderstohr4198
      @alexanderstohr4198 Pƙed 3 lety

      at collecting time - but latest before sending that to the shredder.

  • @markhaus
    @markhaus Pƙed 3 lety

    This is a great idea. I might give it a try for test prints or prototype phase prints

  • @Ojref1
    @Ojref1 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    If you have a splicer, you could use the recycled for internal fills and save your pretty filament for the external layer.

  • @LouieFromPikmin
    @LouieFromPikmin Pƙed 3 lety +5

    I’ve never used a 3D printer in my life, but this is still interesting!