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by naasking 776 days ago
> but it depends on being able to orient the layer lines such that the directions of relative strength and weakness are appropriate for the use case.

I think this is sometimes a bit overblown though. CNC kitchen also demonstrated that you can achieve nearly 80% of the horizontal strength in the vertical direction, you just have to print HOT and SLOW. So "strength" profiles just have to be different than "fast printing" profiles.

2 comments

Thanks for sharing the concept and the link - interesting read.

However, since the overall message (as regards strength) seems to be something like 'if you fine-tune your print settings to be unrealistically slow, you can mostly but not completely overcome the issue of lower strength due to layer adhesion' - I'm not sure it changes the argument, or makes much difference for most people, in most situations :)

I see it differently: when strength along all axes matters, you no longer need to take more time to carefully design and orient your print to overcome the strength limitations of FDM printing, or overbuild the part on the Z axis and waste filament. My design time is more important than printing time.

Most people are not printing non-stop or printing a functional part on a deadline, so I think it absolutely changes the argument when they need the extra strength.

Fair point :)
I tried to figure out where that figure was from, and spent about an hour or two watching CNC Kitchen videos on Youtube. What a ridiculously inefficient way of sharing test results!

I guess Youtube makes it easy to monetize your work, but as someone interested in results, this is rather frustrating.

Pretty sure it was this one, describing the properties of the "transparent glass" printing method:

https://www.cnckitchen.com/blog/transparent-fdm-3d-prints-ar...

So higher than normal flow, high temp, slow feed rate, and very little cooling showed remarkable strength along layer lines, up to 93% of horizontally printed specimens.

That blog post is even more frustrating than the video. No structure, you need to read a giant wall of text to figure out the result, at that point it's probably faster to just watch the video.

I hate that so much info about 3D printing requires watching hours of videos (even if the videos are just 15 minutes long, you'll end up watching a bunch of them because you don't know which ones contain the info you are looking for)