“visual prototype I mean a prototype that resembles…”
For my work I focus on two types of prototypes, functional & mock-up. If it’s not functional then material and orientation/print strategy isn’t as important but either way DIMENSIONAL ACCURACY is a MUST. A mock-up is necessary for making sure parts fit together correctly, move as intended, look as expected, etc, before going to the next step. I’m not sure where what you call a “visual prototype” fits into this equation unless it is just something to show investors. I very much believe that form should follow function. After it works, you make it look good.
I often deal with designers that are so caught up in the look of an “enclosure” before they even know what is going inside. This almost always results in wasted time/effort/resources.
-Jesse
I print over 30 materials on custom built FDM machines. With minimum effort in the “finishing” stage my clients have gotten prototypes that look like they came off the shelf in an Apple store. Not all FDMs are created equal and the quality of their output is very much dependent on the operator.
-Jesse
That is interesting, would love to see some photos. I appreciate this is a rapidly changing technology. We benched marked a range of machines from £12-20k in 2011 and even the commercially available FDM machines didn’t offer us a part that could be easily finished. Support removal was easier, but sanding and filling to remove the stepped finishing and then painting to a high finish required much more work and still didn’t quite hit the mark. But certainly kudos to you for developing your own machines and creating such good models from them.
I don’t post pictures of my equipment because there are some novel features I hope to patent in the near future and I don’t post picture of my client’s projects due to confidentiality. However, I would say that most of the quality issues you’re talking about have more to do with what I would call “print strategy” than the equipment. Orientation, support structure, and customization of the gcode(like decreasing the layer height for parts of the print with steep angles) are usually the difference between my work and other FDMs. Unfortunately, you cannot buy equipment that does this thinking for you but the ability to print any material that melts is what allows real functioning prototypes, which is absolutely worth the extra work in my opinion.
-Jesse
It would be cool to see some of your own sample parts. It sounds impressive the level of print strategy you put in, not to mention the machine construction itself. In reference to my previous comment, for us, the ‘off the shelf’ commercial FDM solutions just didn’t give us what we were looking for, with a plug-n-play approach.