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May 2016

I am building things to go in saltwater aquariums, so they need to sink, to be more dense than 34ppt seawater (roughly the same as the sea). PLA is no good as it will degrade due to bacterial action, ABS floats, I don’t want to trial and error every type until I find one that sinks!

I am using the ord solutions RoVa3d printer.

  • created

    May '16
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    May '16
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Hey Tony,

how about metal filled filaments like the brass/bronze/copper from Colorfabb or Protopasta’s stainless steel? They all have densities above 3.5g/cm^3.

Sincerely,

Jonas

Thank you for your suggestion - unfortunately marine life is very sensitive to metals, particularly copper. I’ll have a look at the steel one, though would even stainless steel not corrode if constantly exposed to seawater?

Why not leave room in the model to mount a rock? Or print in a metal filled filament and then coat it in something like alumilite clear cast.

That will be my fall back, I tend to use glass marbles if I need to weight things down, but it would be more elegant if I could just print in a denser plastic, if one exists.

In theory (actually according to phisycs) assuming I’m not pulling a NASA and screwing up units or conversions. Water is 1g/cm3 Salt water is 1.025-1.05 ABS is 1.04 PLA is 1.25 PETG is 1.38 So PETG should sink and survive in saltwater. Your model would have to be solid plastic or specifically sliced to allow water to fill in all the air pockets. You could stick the part and some saltwater into a vaccum chamber at 10/20 to pull all of the air out and replace it with water.