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Jan 2017

Hi Robin

Do not reduce it to the accuracy. The mandatory removal of the support is another unsolved issue.

Until now I charged either nothing for it, because the object was small and easy to remove, or for support material as it was like 50% of the print, or both: support and removal. Sometimes the customer wanted to remove the support himself.

What now, if the customer wants to remove the support himself ? (To safe money)

It´s quite unfair to raise the overall price, because that affects support free prints also.

Should the hubs, regardless from the wishes of the customer, charge the removal of support (and remove the support anyway) ?

I also just removed the support. I did not tweak the print. Some objects are just crazy ! On big objects it really took several hours just to basically remove the support. With sanding and what so ever finishing this process may take days.

Which customer is willing to pay for it mandatory ?! Well, some want the support removed, but others not.

And as mentioned before: This guideline will make it very hard for single head printer hubs to continue to print with support.

3D hubs may improve the overall quality, but also raises the overall price for 3D prints.

bye, Tibor

I have no issue with setting standards for surface finish and supports and such. What does concern me however is how tolerances are set so high that even ABS plastic shrinkage could potentially put my part out of tolerance.

+1 on optional dimensional tolerances with a searchable badge

+1 on setting standards for surface finish and removal of support structures.

Quoting the list above: “FDM parts need to be produced within an accuracy of +/- 1mm or 1% depending on which is greater.” +/- 1MM is BIG… That means that your 20MM calibration cube could be 19 - 21 MM and STILL be a-ok. That is a huge tolerance. Their not asking you to hold .0005" tolerance on a 3" deep hole…

That’s a tiny tolerance, make a 200mm part and it’s got to be within 2mm?
It’s not about how it comes off your machine, it’s about how it measures when you get it there. Many materials can grow and shrink more than that just from differing moisture levels. Never mind the rest of the stuff I mentioned earlier.

It comes off your machine and measures perfect, gets to the customer and it’s out of tolerance. Now, who is footing the bill and who has to prove it was in spec (and how, since the guidelines are so vague with obviously no proper QA process in place) - guess what, it’s the hub.