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Oct 2016

Afternoon all,

Ben from 3D Hubs here. I am currently working on Knowledge Base 8 content and have been floating the idea of an article that includes a materials specifications table as a quick reference for those new to designing for 3D printing. I have a link to the table here:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1MUmof71k1bBzHhmevocjqgjVcag0GQyxEFLM\_wYfrVU/edit#gid=0

As some of you may already know, the Knowledge Base 8 is a set of technical documents targeted at engineers, architects and product designers who are new to 3D printing.

My questions that I was hoping to get community feedback on are:

1. Do you see value in an article like this from a design perspective?

2. Do you agree with the values I currently have in the table?

3. How do you think content like this is best presented?

Any feedback or advice you could offer would be greatly appreciated.

Cheers

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    Oct '16
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    Nov '16
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Hi Ben,

I think the table would be much more easy to read and to understand (in the context of 3d printing) when you color code the different printing materials to match a certain manufacturing process (FDM, SLS, SLM, …)

Also for many engineering purposes it’s important to know the mechanical properties of the listed example materials, adding the most important or outstanding mechanical properties will help those possible customers. (at least a rough estimate should be given)

Aside from engineering projects there are of course also artistic designers or people that look to print “just good looking” parts. Setting some scales for layer-to-layer smoothness, typical surface roughness or similar with 0 to 5 star ratings will be very helpful, maybe even upload a library of high res pictures of different 3d printed features (bottom surface, top surface, vertical surface, overhangs (especially for FDM), holes, round surfaces, …) so people can get a better understanding of how their 3d print will look once ordered.

This would also take quite a bit of stress from the hubs away as I find myself explaining the very basic details of the 3d printing process as well as looking up detailed specifications just for a single print.

As you might be able to tell right now I do in fact like the idea of a table that lists and properly compares the different 3d printing processes and/or materials.

As for the values I sadly have little to no experience with printing processes other then FDM so I wont be able to judge on those.

-Marius

Thanks @twiesner. We already have something very similar to this on our website (Online 3D Printing Service | Instant 3D Printing Quotes | Hubs 9 - if you click on a material and then click learn more). I think what we are aiming to do with the knowledge base is consolidate this information into one easy location with more of a technical feel (for engineers etc). I can certainly see the benefit of the Shapeways page for new 3D printing customers though. Thanks for your feedback! Cheers, Ben