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Aug 2015

I’ve tried to make it work, such an easy solution, right. But you see what it does to your printer, the axels, etc. Elmer blue stick works really good for small prints as long as you are printing on glass, with clips, the best is at least 2.5mm thick but I’ve found some 2.7mm that works even better, it does not warp. And the best so far for sticking is, and I don’t want to say it because it is already expensive to buy, the cubestick. Although I have a new idea that I need to try that will make it even easier to print. I’ll keep you inform if you are interested.

But what do I do about getting the hair spray off? And after that, I should try Elmer Blue Stick with glass? Will it work with the stock build plate?

P.S. I would like to be informed about your new idea :slight_smile:

It’s not just any hairspray, it’s Aquanet or garnier fructis super extra hold. remove the glass plate, wash in the sink to get the excess off. Don’t use binder clips. .5mm silicone pads available on Amazon as gino pads are the best solution for keeping the glass surface from sliding around. Glass is hard and flat, even the dollar store 8x9 picture frames. Will withstand a nozzle drag or two. Binder clips with reintroduce and warp in the build plate, silicone will allow the glass to securely float. Downside is they break occasionally, but they’re only a few dollars and, in my experience, break in one or two large pieces. Don’t use tempered, that’s a disaster waiting to happen. Borosilicate is an expensive option for glass, but is prone to chipping.