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Mar 2015

I have print job that I thought would be fairly straightforward, but I’m having trouble finding any information anywhere that will tell me if this is possible. My print job is a small disk about the size of a nickel with printing (Arial bold 20pt) on it. I would like it in two colors. I have 4000 unique versions of this job (only printing is different) and have no idea of how many of each I’ll need. It could be 10 and it could be 1000! I would like the printing embedded into the disk.

The thing is that I read all this stuff about the resolution on 3D printers being phenomenal, but the quality of the results I’ve seen remind me of the old dot matrix printers compared to today’s laser printers.

I can design this with CAD, but don’t want to go to that much effort if this is either not possible or not cost effective. Am I not asking the right questions? I’ve attached a copy
cap design2.pdf (181 KB)

  • created

    Mar '15
  • last reply

    Feb '16
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Oh injection molding is only intersting above 10.000 pieces because moldcosts are high!

Hi Mark,

i have started printing the coin part. Due to the very high contrast of the colors the black shines a little bit through the yellow color. I’m trying to fix this by printing the coin flipped on it’s side. Then the second nozzle is never touching the print unless this nozzle actually prints.

As you can see i have used my own font that is optimised for printing it, i have to make a tiny adjustment for the flowrate of the first layer, so that the lines are smoothly fused together. I have other coins which have a smoother surface, but these have more black filament fused with the yellow background, so that they are not really representative for the final prints.

The final version will most likely look like this one, exept that the shadow from the black filament fused with the background will be gone and the lines are smoothly melted together to a solid coin. I have also added another picture of a test lego brick that shows the real yellow color aswell as what you can expect as a smooth surface when choosing my hub for printing. (I broke the knobs off the lego brick to test layerbonding)

I’ve printed the coin slightly larger then supposed to be, so that i can figure out the best settings when printing small, downsizing the print is no problem.

The hexagonal shape of the upper part will not be necessary to archive high quality prints.

However i have thought about recessing the letters and having a solid black disc inside of the upper part.

The yellow surrounding would be printed above the black disk and by that the lettering appears.

I’ve got some other ideas on how to get the cleanest yellow while maintaing absolutely filled black letters.

Please tell me if you are still interested in having these parts printed. Please contact me so that we can discuss further details of the print. Also i then would like to explain further ideas on how to improove the models geometry and design.

-Marius

Hi Mark,

how do you think about the followig color combinations, yellow and black is one of the most readable combinations but as i said in the comment above the yellow color doesn’t cover black spots of oozing (i am working on it with good success, pictures will follow today or tomorrow).

-Black and red

-Green and red

-red and white

-dark blue and white

-dark green and yellow

the list cointains the text color at first, then the background color.

Hope to hear about your progress and opinion,

Marius

Hey Mark,

I don’t want to bother you, but still I’d like to hear from you and want to know, if you still are looking for someone to make these parts.

I’ve had further success printing the part as you can see below, i have added a M6 nut for size reference.

Currently I have some more parts being printed with improoved surface quality (as you might see there are some cavities in the red surface).

The new way of printing the letters allows me to use any colors without them mixing in the surface, there won’t be any little dot of black filament fused into the red/yellow background part.

The colors are very clearly seperated, no colormixing on the letters edges. Even white and black would be possible, for maximum contrast and ease of reading.

By the way all letters are printable with this method, no limitation to just capital letters, same goes for numbers, punctuation and more. (Like the “<” in “I <3 CAKE”, or the “,” in “HI, MARK”).

-Marius

Print flat against build plate in black resin (pigmented). Print another .25micron thick disk that surrounds it in yellow resin. Glue together or snap fit.

Hi Mark,

no problem, i’ve send you an email.

-Marius

10 months later
16 days later

From what I can see here is the part is printed upside down in PLA.

The design is simple so start on Tinkercad and make all your parts for your first session and see where that goes.

I see that your letters dont follow a curve. This lends itself to extreme simplicity and ease of effort in working the design.

After that you have a starter library for next set of parts.

Don’t do cad? This makes your whole project a larger problem than it has to be.

Flexibility upfront is the key. I have found there are 3d printers that don’t do cad. How can this be?

I have a PRUSA i3. I used Tinkercad to create a Bowen hot end holder. Took 3 days. I then created a x axis holder for a Dremel remote tool. 1 day to create, 3 days to print, 5 days total to get it on the printer. It isnt that tough. Precision? Extreme. I used digital calipers to measure the Dremel then went straight into cad. I have a long history in the creative arts so perception to drawing to cad to device wasnt that tough. I hope you fair well in your endeavour. Sometimes take a step back and dont rely too much on others when you know you can get something done by most of your own efforts.

My thoughts are to make metal deposition moulds for injection. This will drop your costs quite a bit and give you the detail you need but doesnt solve the two color part. Or find somebody with a dual color print box, cad up a test, and send around for test. 2nd option is the cheapest by far with no real commitment and gives you something really quick to fondle in your view thereby giving something tangible to change your perceptions. Its the only way to get the rocks out of the way. Fustration always breeds complexity in the beginning.