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Jul 2016

Hi everybody,

I need 3D printed details for a low-volume product. I would need around 50 pcs/year.

I have tested a lot of printers, especially printers that is said in tests to have good quality such as Ultimaker 2+, but I have not found anything that is OK yet.

The thing I need is a small case for electronics with windows for LEDs. Ideal would be a 2-material print with the LED window in transparent material. But I would be happy with a single material with holes where I put in LED windows. I would prefer to not do any surface treatment on each piece.

The material should be something that will last for many years. I have used ABS in most prints. I feel uncertain about PLA, but there may be other materials that will work.

What I want is reasonably regular surfaces. It doesn’t matter if the layers are visible as long as there is no big variation X/Y from layer to layer. But it seems that if there is a disturbance in a layer such as a hole, this will cause things to happen all around that layer.

I suspect that this has to do both with the slicer and the position accuracy. I am attaching pictures of a 2 material print with LEDs, same with the LEDs out and one with 1 material. The black is ABS in all photos.

It would be very nice with some suggestions about hub and/or printer and/or material.

Best regards

Kurt Mirdell

  • created

    Jul '16
  • last reply

    Jul '16
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Hi Kurt, you really should be able to find better quality than the items in the photos with something like an Ultimaker 2+ or many other printers. Do you know what settings were used for these examples? I’ve printed several items with holes with a precise required dimension and they’ve been spot on.

One other tip would be to print onto glass as this will give the bottom layer a nice glossy smooth finish which looks great for the control surface of a device.

On average, it is more. However, it sounds like he wants to move from a prototype over to something closer to a production ready part. Getting a master using SLA, then going to a silicone mold does make sense. The overall costs would be less with a production run of 50+.

9 days later

Hi Kurt,

my 3D shop at Sveavägen in Stockholm can help you. We are working with solid blocks of real materials, like aluminium, wood and platsics, to make end products in small runs. And if you need prototypes, we make those with FDM 3D printing.

Give me a shout via my Hub if you are interested!

Best
/Lamin