First post on here but the hub is getting busy and really loving all the tinkering. That said, it’s due time to join the community. Thanks to 3D hubs for making this happen.
We’ve been tweaking our Flashforge Creator Pro and its amazing how much better it is than out CubePro. It’s a shame. With the Creator comes all the joys of fun filaments and we sure have been having fun.
We’ve gone through quite a few nozzles and rebuilt the extruders a number of times but that’s the joys of printing with the unique filaments. With all the tinkering we have the machine dialed! And Simplify3D IS WORTH the money if you ask me.
Have a peek at a few of our latest creations…I’ve seen some killer finishes posted around the web so we’re constantly trying to improve. Any feedback is welcome.
These are seriously great prints @oshi146 - thanks for sharing them! Really really great finish. Any finishing tips for the rest of us that you’re willing to share?
Thanks Nikki! Yeah you bet a few helpful tips are:
1. Print with lots of outer layers if you plan on getting a nice finish and not having to worry about damaging your shell. The default 2 layers is definitely not enough i do at least 4 and did 6 on these (plus it gives it a great weight).
2. Be patient - even i struggle with this. Let it tumble at least 12 hours but try for 24. Then be ready for some artistic work with the fine finishing. Thats the fun part - giving it a unique character. Im seriously having a hard time going back to standard PLA and ABS.
3. Get creative with your tumbling mix. I used just standard steelshot to being with but ended up adding screws - even a few bottle caps. The Steel ones we are working on now we even used salt so we can give it a quick rusty look. The classic Lortone tumblers work great and they are rather inexpensive. Some super fine grit sanpaper is a must too (800+).
More good tips to come if you give this post some votes…
Thanks gabriela! Very flattering. I think the true masterpiece will the be the steampunk gear box we are working on with all metallic filaments, a little rusted iron, patina copper, lots of character…and its even magnetic! Will be posting soon.