3D Printing

From DBE Makers
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Ultimaker S5 for large-scale FDM printing.

3D Printing or additive manufacturing is the process of creating physical 3D objects from a digital model. In the Makerspace, we use Fused Deposition Modelling printing (FDM) technology for printing 3D models into physical objects. This is available for all students of DBE. To print, you must complete a General Makerspace Induction and a 3D Printing Badge.

The DBE Makerspace contains 22 3D printers. You can also access 3D printers in the 202 Digital Modelling Workshop.

Specifications

Dimensions

Type Quantity Build Volume No. of Extruders Resolution
Ultimaker 2+ Connect 10 223 x 220 x 205mm 1 0.06 – 0.2mm
Ultimaker S3 11 230 x 190 x 200mm 2 0.06 – 0.8mm
Ultimaker S5 1 330 x 240 x 300mm 2 0.06 – 0.8mm

Materials Available

Material (click to view SDS) Description Available Colours
PLA (polylactic acid) Good for most 3D print projects. Easy to print, with relatively high strength, low thermal expansion and good adhesion, but low heat resistance White, pearl white, black, transparent, silver, grey, blue, green, teal, purple, red, orange, yellow
Tough PLA Similar strength to ABS and heat-resistant to 58°C White, black
TPU95A (thermoplastic polyurethane) Flexible, elastic, chemical-resistant filament Red
PVA (polyvinyl alcohol) Water-soluble support material, for specialised applications only Natural

Setting up your Files

Check for modelling errors

Common issues with 3D printing occur due to bad geometry, please make sure you check you meshes for the following before handing it to the technician team:

Error Type What this is? What does it causes? How do you fix it?
Non Manifold Geometry When an objects has edges that are not totally connected or objects with added faces. The object does not have volume. Doing this causes some or all of the model to have no volume making it impossible to print. Geometry must be fully enclosed (watertight), and only 2 faces may share an edge.
Non Unified Faces When an mesh’s faces (normals) are not all facing in the correct direction. Doing this cases printing software to not understand what is inside or outside the model leading to unexpected results. Check that your face’s normals are all facing the correct direction.
Support Issues When there are not enough support structures to print parts of an object in mid-air. Without supports, your object may fail to print and break apart. Supports can be added during the printing process but it is also recommended you support anything over a 45 degree angle or to print your object in multiple pieces you glue after printing.

Check list

  1. Check for Non-Manifold Errors
  2. Check for Naked Edges
  3. Fill/ Cap Holes
  4. Unify Normals
  5. Convert your model to a Mesh
  6. Export your model as a .stl file

Documentation

STL Files Preparation FDM Design guide Printing Troubleshooting

Setting up your model in Rhino

CONSTRAINTS

BEST PRACTICES