Oh I have everything I need to add a glass bed to my Wanhao Duplicator I3. I have a piece of Borosilicate glass, I have heat conducting material to adhere it to the bed I have M3 tape to adhere the PEI that I purchased. Do I pull up the material on the bed now with the Wanhao rhino logo and start there or do I put it over that piece. Ill be honest Im kind of nervous I dont want to ruin the printer after a weeks use lol. Please Help.
Out of curiosity why are you adding so many layers? Also remember that glass and borosilicate glass degrades over time, mine last about 4-6 months and need to be replaced. Why glass and pei?
every tutorial I have seen adheres the PEI to the glass bed as it is very thin. Advice I got on here I believe said to put the PEI on the glass I may be wrong idk…
Personally I removed the BuildTak (The black material with the Wanhao Rhino logo) on it. I couldn’t get the silicone pads to adhere to it - they kept moving around. Removing the BuildTak is messy (it leavs a glue residue that I scraped off carefully), and you need to be careful to not bend the aluminium bed. I lifted a corner, and then used the scraper that shipped with my I3 to gently pull and lift it off the bed. Not that the scraper is pretty much ruined afterwards - the glue that was used between my bed and BuildTak was sticky, and more pain to get off the scraper than was worth my while. I’m sure there is some solvent that you could use to easily get rid of the glue - I only tried methylated spirits and it didn’t work, but perhaps acetone, rubbing alchohol or turps might work. (In fact, I’ll try tonight and give you feedback if you’re willing to wait).
I assume by “heat conducting material” you mean the silicone pads. I bought a large sheet of silicone (I gave you a link earlier), and cut it into 5cm x 5cm squares (some guys use more), and place 9 of them on the aluminium bed, and then place the glass on top of that. Note that the whole point of using the silicone pads is that it holds the glass on the bed quite well, but it is still very easy to get the glass off again.
I suggest you try it yourself before removing the BuildTak: just put the silicone on the bed with BuildTak, then place the glass on top of it. If the silicone pads move around on the BuildTak, you’ll have to remove it, unless someone else has a good solution for that.
I purchased a Maker Select, so my printer didn’t come with the Wanhao BuildTak. But, heat is often quite useful for removing sticky material. Might try heating your bed to 100° when removing the BuildTak. It may make it easier.
-EDIT: I had no idea these things come with Build-Tak now. It used to just be this giant metallic sticker at the top of the bed. Probably better to remove the Build-Tak first, but the rest of your plan is spot-on -
As far as the sticker thing, just put the gino pads on right over it, it’s no big deal. I use the exact same setup, and printing has never been easier. Only gotcha is to make sure you get the bubbles out of the tape - I adhered the tape to the glass first, used a razor and credit card to make slits and get the bubbles out, then applied the PEI sheet. You may get some little ones there too, but go slow and it will work fine. The PEI also comes with a layer of protective film on both sides - don’t forget to remove it!
I run multiple prints every day usually back to back. Glass degradation is a known issue when used for high volume 3d printing. I’m not saying anything bad about pei. It works and have several sheets on the way. It’s just a huge cost increase over glass. If you run multiple prints non stop every day, letting a machine cool down becomes a cost issue. Because of that I’d need two sheets of pei per print bed plus a spare for when they break which means dozens of sheets.