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Apr 2016

I am looking to prototype some parts and was wondering about minimum feature sizes and best printer/materials to use.

I am hoping to create a part with ~200 um diameter holes, patterned in an ~ 1 mm thick rectangle about the size of a post-it note. Are printers capable of building this within an ~10 um accuracy? If so, what do you recommend for materials/printer to use?

There are no strict mechanical/chemical property requirements for this part. Only the holes are uniform and somewhat smooth.

Thank you for time and any help.

Regards,

Daniel

  • created

    Apr '16
  • last reply

    Oct '16
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200 micron holes with +/_ 10 micron ??? I don’t believe any printer is capable of doing it today. But laser drilling is definitely capable.

Thanks for the help. I was originally hoping for cylindrical holes through the part. A square shaped hole might work as well.

The reason I ask is because I plan to drop 180 um spheres through the holes. I need them to be able to pass through each hole consistently (and I can not just increase the size of the hole).

What printing material would you recommend for highest quality without spending a whole lot on this project($250+)?

6 months later