Go to homepage
2 / 14
Sep 2016

Hi, I’ve recently purchased a Nobel 1.0 SLA printer which is my first SLA printer that I’ve owned. After looking through pictures for slicing SLA prints, I’ve noticed that a lot of parts are printed on top of a load of support material whereas the same parts could easily be printed without any support on FDM. Is this something that I just need to get used to doing and if so, does this mean my customers should be expecting to pay a lot more for support material through 3D hubs compared to FDM?

Thanks a lot

Ben

  • created

    Sep '16
  • last reply

    Sep '16
  • 13

    replies

  • 6.2k

    views

  • 4

    users

Hi @MindFuLL,

I’ve taken your advice and started using meshmixer for orientation and support and the results are coming out much better. One thing I was curious about is how much adjustment is needed from the default support settings as I’ve just printed a long strip and unfortunately it detached from the support. Would this just be a case of increasing the tip diameter or did you play with any of the other settings?

Thanks again!

Are you using the SLA/DLP preset? If not this is a good place to start. Slightly increasing the tip diameter can definitely help but would obviously result in larger support marks. Slightly tweaking the orientation or angle of the supports can make a difference as well. You want to be mindful of the side being “peeled” first. This is where there is the most danger of separation.

I play with ALL settings wherever I find them.

-Jesse