TLDR: Emboss letters in 3D, mask non-letter area with soap, fill with white silicone and rub off mask when dry
@stevewood49066 ай бұрын
Deboss, not emboss.
@WhirlysWorldVideo5 ай бұрын
17:32 - "This is one of my 'shorter' videos." (And wouldn't it be TL/DW?)
@josephpk48787 ай бұрын
Nail polish, thinned with a bit of acetone. An 18 gauge blunt needle on a syringe. Fill it up, put the needle into the engraved text and carefully trace out your lines. Once you get the hang of it, you can do it without error and the finish is solid and permanent.
@akaHarvesteR6 ай бұрын
I tried this once, but the nail polish seeped into the layer lines and it looked pretty bad. I didn't even thin it.
@josephpk48786 ай бұрын
Depending on the finish you're looking for, you may need a deeper offset/deboss (0.5 -1.0mm) and you may need more than 1 coat. Fill it up - it'll shrink - especially when thinned. If you're planning on sanding the final surface and spraying a hardcoat, you can overfill and sand it flush.
@nerobaal66556 ай бұрын
You could definitely hit it with a quick clear coat and that’d more then likely keep it from seeping through any layers.
@nerobaal66556 ай бұрын
I like the needle and the liquid idea. Use liquid 3D printer resin and buy it in white or clear then a set of alcohol resin dyes. You could fill it and UV cure it even. There’s also a UV curable silicone available i think. 🤔
@josephpk48786 ай бұрын
I use the needles mainly for glueing, but have used it for paints, as well. Never used resins, but now that you've mentioned it, I'm definitely going to try it out.
@tomperkowski77916 ай бұрын
Just saw your video, very nice. I used a different method. I printed by using raised letters and white filament, spray painted the part with matte black paint and then sanded the lettering exposing the only letters as white. Maybe a few less steps. Just proves that with 3D printing there are multiple solutions.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Nice idea. Thanks!
@paappraiser6 ай бұрын
Old school soaping. I learned this in the 70's and is still one of the best ways besides masking fluid.
@Tensquaremetreworkshop6 ай бұрын
I find that just painting on acrylic paint and wiping it off with a lint-free cloth works well. Doing it twice, with the 2 wipe-offs at 90 deg to each other deals with wipeout on some letters.
@Nebulorum6 ай бұрын
Really nice I thing you could use a negative draft angle to allow the silicon to have a larger area deeper in the letter. Like they do with mercury tooth filling.
@spambot71106 ай бұрын
i wonder if the acute angle at the surface would also act as a sort of blade to help cut off the residue on top of the soap, leading to cleaner edges and reduced risk of dragging a letter out of the hole when cleaning it up
@jimdean73353 ай бұрын
I just saw this video and have used this technique in the past. I recently purchased a new 3d printer with multiple spools and made lettering much easier.
@mistahke6 ай бұрын
Done some of the embossed lettering in even smaller scale the thing is way easier than what you did. 1. Go to any "Chinese" multishop and buy a set of brushes for nails - cheap various sizes. 2 Use modelling acrylic paint (Tamiya, Vallejo, AK) 3. paint the letters inside you can use the moderate amount of paint to fill in the grooves. 4. Take a q-tip and remove the excess paint from around the borders with water. 5 Add varnish for flavor if you want. Done
@nunopenaspt6 ай бұрын
There is a strong glue/sealer called Soudal T-Rex (white), that I've used with your soap technique and it works perfect, it won't come out and it's a lot harder than silicone. thank´s for this tutorial
@ebayscopeman6 ай бұрын
I use Testors model paint and wipe with Naptha using a Kim Wipe. I used to do old Tektronix Oscilloscope panels all the time.
@vegsalad6 ай бұрын
To keep the letters from coming out like your letter L, you could taper the indents in the 3D model instead of 90° sides so the deeper they go the wider they are. This would provide more of a mechanical lock like a dovetail and may allow finer lines at the surface.
@ItalianRetroGuy6 ай бұрын
That's a great idea
@davidvee90706 ай бұрын
Thanx for this!!!. Tried and tested and is actually perfect. To improve applying the silicone- in your slicer settings do an iron top layer, that way you wont get the grooves on the top layer. I have found a way to make different colour lettering!!!!!! as theres not many colours available in silicon
@NegdoshaManido2 жыл бұрын
I used lightweight spackling compound in my P-40 throttle. I even used it in the "P" of a prop lever from a real Shakespeare throttle quadrant that I restored. So far, it's working, but I'm thinking of applying some clear paint over the knobs to help seal the lettering a bit better. Thanks for the video!
@fxm57155 ай бұрын
When doing this sort of thing for 3D printed, subtractive lettering, you can add a slight undercut to each letter to help hold in the pigmented material, whether it's silicone, resin, or paint.
@captaincrash92862 жыл бұрын
Thanks, I gave up on my Spitfire IX trim wheel after making a mess of my airscrew lever. Now I'll be able to go back to it with confidence!
@danpinto24733 ай бұрын
have you tried the "iron" top layer feature in your slicer. this would reduce the lines and space to get into. Another thing can be a filament change at a layer to white for a few layers, then change back to black. This will leave a white ring on the knob, but you can fix with appropriate spay paint, which may give a more authentic look.
@AuthentiKit3 ай бұрын
I agree. Both good options. Black sharpie would fix the white line quickly
@Liberty4Ever6 ай бұрын
Great technique, although I'll probably use my pneumatically controlled adhesive dispenser with the syringe filled with paint. Press the foot pedal to dispense paint from a needle into the embossed lettering while moving the needle in the letters to spread it around. Gravity and surface tension do a lot of the fine detail work as the paint self levels and wicks up the sidewalls. Let it dry and then spray everything with a few layers of clear coat to seal the surface, level the surface over the lettering, and protect it from gunk getting into the lettering or abrasion.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
That soubds perfect. I’ve alsotried syringes but its hard to get even pressure. Now a foot pedal would be great.
@Liberty4Ever6 ай бұрын
@@AuthentiKit - The foot pedal activates a switch that opens a pneumatic valve to pressurize the top of the syringe. The pressure is adjusted by a pressure regulator to dispense the fluid at the proper rate depending on viscosity. When the foot switch isn't pressed, the top of the syringe experiences vacuum from a vacuum generator to almost instantly stop the flow and prevent any dripping or oozing. The vacuum pressure is also adjusted based on the fluid's viscosity. It works very well. New units are expensive but used models can be purchased inexpensively.
@ElizabethGreene5 ай бұрын
Thank you for the technique. I've had similar good luck with smooshing air dry clay into the embossed areas of parts. It can be cleaned off easily before it dries.
@DaveEtchells4 ай бұрын
Brilliant solution! I have a multicolor printer, but the general idea of using dishwashing jiquid as a mask for some other substance is very generally applicable.
@AuthentiKit4 ай бұрын
Thanks - it does work well though to be honest i tend to use decorator's caulk these days as it wipes off more easily
@jeremyboyce79212 жыл бұрын
That’s a great technique! Thanks for the tutorial!
@jebinite6 ай бұрын
Thanks for documenting your process, it’s a cool idea. You’ve inspired the entire comments section to think up a better way. Maybe a follow up video could include a comparison of the top commented techniques.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
I've been wondering about that. Sometimes it's horses for courses too - depending on the type of printed item.
@JohnVanderbeck11 ай бұрын
Print the letters raised instead of sunked, print in white. Spray paint black, then take a file and fub down the letters. Simple.
@AuthentiKit11 ай бұрын
Nice idea. Thanks!
@1RDriver6 ай бұрын
Or with raised letters, if it’s the highest part of the print, print with black and add a pause in your slicer when you get to the letter layer and switch to white filament for the letters.
@JohnVanderbeck6 ай бұрын
@@1RDriver Certainly works if you are using FDM but not with Resin
@N2AIE6 ай бұрын
Years ago when working for Collins Radio, I had to 'refurbish' front panels. They had similar indentations for lettering. We used a white crayon and just rubbed it back and forth over the indented lettering....worked every time, no muss no fuss..
@nunopenaspt6 ай бұрын
You can also use a 3D Printing Pen with white PLA, but in the end you have to sand it to perfection.
@CaptainBobSim2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for introducing me to this technique! Quite fascinating!
@gfixler Жыл бұрын
Just randomly stumbled onto this, wandering through 3D print videos. If you're able to manually swap out colors, you can model the letters as a separate object, and simply print them in white, right in the same layer as the black part. I made some custom key caps for my steno keyboard with this technique in Prusaslicer (set up 2 extruders, and check the box for single print head, and it'll auto-add the color change code, which pauses the print, moves the head out of the way, and beeps to let you know to change colors). These were printed face-down, for geometry reasons, but also to get really smooth faces, and I just made the legends one layer in thickness. I couldn't get Prusaslicer to do the obvious thing - just print the letters, then switch colors and print everything else - so it made me switch twice - printed surround in white, switch to black, print letters, switch back to white, print the rest - but two switches isn't too much work. You could also do this on a top face. With white letters, you may need 2 layers to get the opacity you want, but again, it's only maybe 4 manual color swaps in all. Here's a little gallery of the results: photos.app.goo.gl/ESNPo86SNm2ZRxNF8
@AuthentiKit Жыл бұрын
Hi, thanks yes, we're doing this now for a few things but it works best when the top surface is flat. When there's a curve it's a bit tricky.
@gfixler Жыл бұрын
@@AuthentiKit cool! It's fun, but I feel like your technique gives a more authentic look.
@NicksStuff6 ай бұрын
Have you thought about using a negative draft angle for the letters, so that the silicone is *mechanically* locked inside the cavity?
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Great idea
@andyu696 ай бұрын
@@AuthentiKit Was thinking same, or a connecting sub-surface tunnel.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
@@andyu69 Split it in half, tape over the exit of the letters, fill the inside with silicone (letters joined as you say with channels/tunnels) so it pushes out to the surface, then join the halves either with screws from the back so not visible or glue them
@yeroca2 жыл бұрын
Very nice! You might consider making the letters a wedge shape so that the silicone won't peel out as easily. Also I wonder if there are dyes you could add for different colors.
@AuthentiKit2 жыл бұрын
What a great idea !
@wickedPrints32566 ай бұрын
Have you considered raised lettering? set a pause in the slice and change the filament color. Resume print and viola!
@core366 ай бұрын
You’ll find that it may not be so easy on the bigger wheel.
@peterkn26 ай бұрын
Wouldn't it leave one or more layers of color on any layer that's at the same height as the letters?
@core366 ай бұрын
@@peterkn2 correct. one can maybe achieve this with custom gcode and a lot of patience, but at this point just get a multi material printer
@wickedPrints32566 ай бұрын
@@peterkn2 I haven't had that issue. I modeled a part with raised letters and made sure the height was evenly divisible by .2 (1mm) and it worked great. The first color was orange and the letters were white.
@Liberty4Ever6 ай бұрын
I used yellow TPU to print large custom raised lettering on some black TPU mud flaps that I made for my Japanese mini truck. It turned out great. It wouldn't be as nice with smaller lettering because FDM print resolution is fairly low, and it also wouldn't work in the example shown because the control wheels had portions that were higher than the lettering. Raised lettering is seldom the highest portion of an object because it'd be scraped off by contact with other objects coming in contact with it. That's why most lettering is engraved (negative, below the surface) rather than embossed (positive, raised).
@DerekCroxtonWestphalia8 ай бұрын
This is exactly what I need. Engraved letters are too narrow to paint but you need something to make them stand out. My only concern is that this looks like a lot of effort, but until I get a dual filmament printer, it's a great option.
@tvideo11896 ай бұрын
You don't need a dual filament printer. All you need to do is insert an M600 line in your GCODE and manually swap colors. EVERY slicer has this option.
@DerekCroxtonWestphalia6 ай бұрын
@@tvideo1189 That works if your printing different levels completely. Embedding one colour filament in a level with another colour like this would mean a huge amount of swapping. It would be virtually impossible.
@tvideo11896 ай бұрын
@@DerekCroxtonWestphalia I have no idea what you are saying. Printing another, different color layer in the bottom of the incised letters level is easy and I have done it MANY times. You do end up with a layer in your print that is the layer color of the letters, but that hardly detracts at all... even looks kinda cool in lots of instances.
@DerekCroxtonWestphalia6 ай бұрын
@@tvideo1189 You print a whole layer right at the bottom of the letters? Okay, that could work but you don't end up with filled in letters like he has here, plus as you point out it means the whole layer is a different colour. Good for you if you like it, that's not what I'm going for.
@UnlikelyToRemember6 ай бұрын
@@DerekCroxtonWestphalia you wouldn't have to do a whole layer, you could print an outer ring of the base color and then fill in the rest of the layer in a white disc. you could do this for multiple layers for thickness as long as your top layer(s) were all black
@lambdacalculus8316 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic Job! Absolutely beautiful!
@_droid6 ай бұрын
It's possible to swap filaments on *any* 3D printer. It just takes some manual labor at a few points. For lettering like that you can usually get away with 2 or 3 layers at most which is about 6-ish manual swaps. That's a lot less work than this technique, looks professional, and is as durable as the knob itself. With that said, a true authentic look probably would be paint.
@guspaz3 ай бұрын
The problem with that is that it's easy to manually swap filaments in between layers, but difficult (or impossible) to manually swap filaments mid-layer. So it only really works if your text is embossed completely above the surface of the rest of the print. Luckily, the price to entry for automatic multi-filament printing is down to $350 USD (Bambu Lab A1 Mini + AMS Lite), so it's become quite affordable.
@_droid3 ай бұрын
@@guspaz There is a filament change GCODE. Most if not all printer firmware supports it. If you don't have an automatic changer it will pause and do all the stuff it's suppose to like retract the old filament then wait for you to insert the new filament. Works exactly the same as the automatic system and can do anything it can except you have to do manual work to remove the old filament and insert the new each time.
@mellertid5 ай бұрын
Acrylic "artist" paint is useful for various filling, fixing, indexing and insulating jobs! Non aggressive, permanent(ish) but generally removable, cheap, colorful, great shelf life, water soluble when wet. Decently fast setting. It does shrink a bit.
@MrGTAmodsgerman8 ай бұрын
Printing with two different colored filaments could make that one too. But this one is also a very interesting approach. But i recommend to use the smooth surface feature in Cura slicer for the top finish, to have it not stick else where then just the lettering. Those parts would be ideal for that slicer setting.
@AuthentiKit8 ай бұрын
Good suggestion - the ironing thing?
@MrGTAmodsgerman8 ай бұрын
@@AuthentiKit Yes
@wolffang4895 ай бұрын
Fun fact, soaps can also be used for plaster mold release.
@pauldorman6 ай бұрын
I would try sanding and polishing them first, then gently apply some release wax with a few layers of cloth backed by something hard. You might be able to use white epoxy then, which would be more durable and less prone to becoming grubby
@jimharmon34046 ай бұрын
I see a lot of great techniques suggested here. Thank you all. I recommend that the lower layers of the lettering be undercut so the silicone can fill a cavity locking it in place. Since I restore / repair antique radios I wish I had the tools and skills to recreate knobs and odd trim pieces with a 3D printer.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Yes, the undercut is a great improvement on the method. For antique radios i’d suggest a resin printer and get a free hobbyist copy of fusion 360 and just start playing with it. Knobs and trim are easy stuff with f360. all3dp.com/1/best-resin-dlp-sla-3d-printer-kit-stereolithography/
@sleepib3 ай бұрын
I've had good results using one layer of filament of one color for the lettering, then switching to the background color and printing the rest of the part. It's just one filament change near the start of the print, so it doesn't take as long.
@AuthentiKit3 ай бұрын
I've started doing that on certain designs too
@adrianmuller4656 ай бұрын
Wow you have a very nice sounding voice and your word choice is just so on point. You could charge money for that service! Just as a voice actor and instructor!
@ejennings986 ай бұрын
Very cool technique, well done!
@sh8zen3 ай бұрын
I notice your elevator trim indicates 'NH' & 'TH'. Presumably for Nose High and Tail High. Is that really what the P51 trim control indicated? In the states here, we usually refer to elevator trim as 'Nose Up' and 'Nose Down' . Just wondering if we in the states have had an evolution of nomenclature.
@Avi8tor8576 ай бұрын
White out (liquid paper) pin, or the chrome paint pins if you want chrome instead of white work well also. Obviously if you have the time to watch the print you can stop your 3d print swap to white, print 1-2 layers of the letter surface, then switch back to black but that is hard to get the timing right. Though 2 color printers are cheap enough these days if you are doing a lot of it it. You can actually take the filament, measure out the length, splice in some white so that it will print white at the right point, but that is hard to get perfect. Using the silicone technique (or any other fill/paint) if print a stencil with the part (so a 2-3 layer thick part that just has the letters cut out that will line up with the letters in the part, can use indexing pins/holes also if need be). lightly glue stick them together. Apply the silicone or paint. Let cure, pull off the stencil. Then use a sharp razor to trim the letters to surface height if you got too much in them.
@davejennings58865 ай бұрын
Use a cheap silicone sealant finishing tool or squeegee. Ones with flat, straight edges found in DIY & tiling stores for tidying up sealant gun silicone around worktops and bath edges. With a bit of practice, you can wipe over all the flat surfaces & the squeegee will leave silicone in the grooves and clean the flat surfaces as its drawn across. Each flat surface might need a very fine abrasive polish before hand but you might want to do that anyway for a nice smooth finish. Can use acrylic paint instead of silicone sealant which might peel over time as the sealant wont really bond with the plastic surface. Easier, cleaner and quicker than masking off with washing up liquid.
@Cyromantik6 ай бұрын
The cool thing about starting up your 3D printing hobby is that it's not as easy as people think it is, or rather entry level units lack features to make it less meticulous. Stay with me here, the silver lining here is that the 2nd hand market is great! You can get a gently used 3D printer for less than $200, and often it will come with filament because the frustrated seller will be happy to get it all out of their home. That said, it also means that a person should self educate and experiment once they have their printer all set up. KZbin is a huge resource, Made With Layers, Teaching Tech, CNC Kitchen to name a few. Start small, like these fine knobs this Content Creator is making, little gadgets like chip bag clips or kitchen hooks, etc. It takes a while to complete a print, there's usually some post-processing, maybe some light sanding, and mistakes will be made but it's also a lot of fun! It helps if you're a type who enjoys journeys as much or more than destinations. :)
@a4d94 ай бұрын
I only have 1 head, but I change filament. I have both made raised letters and at the same level as the surface.
@BitSmythe6 ай бұрын
4:35 *Info starts HERE.* 5:40 Skip to 9:00 9:15 Skip to 10:00 10:05 Skip to 11:00 11:05 Let cure overnight, then Skip to 13:30 13:35 Rinse with warm water, then Skip to…. OH, FINISHED! OR even easier, change colors and print with raised white letters. SIMPLE! *_You’re welcome._* 😉
@RufusVidS2 жыл бұрын
Is there a good clear treatment you can put on top to really solidify the lettering once you've cleaned it up? Like a spray on clear acrylic or something?
@AuthentiKit2 жыл бұрын
Not sure myself though I've never felt it needed it as long as the silicone is in securely.
@baalzevuv45094 ай бұрын
If you don't like sanding (like me, tho I print in PETG mostly and it's horrible to sand) you may wanna try scraping / shaving. Simple putty knife works great, just practice a bit to find good angle (around 90 degrees), bent it a bit (using side works better) and shave. Similar technique as using card scraper in woodworking, probably scraper would work even better but never used those tbh
@catlady83244 ай бұрын
🇺🇸 We have Dawn, Ajax, Mr. Clean. 🇬🇧 Brits have Fairy Liquid. ‘Says it all.
@AuthentiKit4 ай бұрын
Well i thought Mr Muscle would be a bit aggressive :-)
@3dconceptsofutah7573 ай бұрын
Nice! Thank you!
@tvideo11896 ай бұрын
I've heard of Unicorn Farts, but not Fairy Liquid. How hard do you have to squeeze Fairies to extract the liquid?
@pzwolski6 ай бұрын
ROTFL 😂😂😂
@dougcox8356 ай бұрын
Another way that's easier to do is to find the last layer before the lettering and print that in white. Then finish the rest of the job after a layer or two of the white. This won't fill it in but it will be permanently white. The side effect is that the edge of the wheel will have a thin white ring at that layer but that might actually look good anyway. Just for looks you could coat the entire top of the wheel with clear to fill it in. The way you change colors is in the slicer with the change filament command. Or you can just use raised letters and all white.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
I agree. I’ve thought of doing that too. You could use a black sharpie to hide the white ring.
@AbeDillon6 ай бұрын
With 3D printing, it should be possible to give the lettering a "lip" or "inner bevel" of some sort (I'm sure there's a technical name for it) so the infill can't peal out. Make the cavity for the letter bigger on the inside instead of having straight walls. Does that make sense?
@hi-ccowboy79836 ай бұрын
Life was much more difficult before the X1C was released.
@WackyBroProductions Жыл бұрын
Looks good. Trying to color fill some printed fire handle caps for my 737.
@NeilWNC6 ай бұрын
Elephant in the room? Many 3d printers are multi-filament now (Bambu, Prusa, Creality). May take a little longer to print, but no post-processing or filling needed.
@charlesspringer47096 ай бұрын
Silicone sealant can be thinned with naptha (white gas in the US or Coleman fuel), which apparently does not effect PLA. You could thin it enough to use a fine brush or a syringe to make sure the bottoms of the grooves are wetted. Neat idea and I will have to white sealant. I wonder if it can be colored easily. The acrylic paints can be good as well but they don't like getting wet.
@MikePreston-darkflib6 ай бұрын
Seems to be 'zippo lighter fuel' based on a quick google, can you confirm?
@charlesspringer47096 ай бұрын
@@MikePreston-darkflib Yes, I think so. It is like a finer distillate of gasoline. Earliest petrol engines used it because it was being distilled for cleaning. The "gasoline" collection of molecules was a waste product from making lamp oil and burned off or evaporated away.
@jimmym2719 Жыл бұрын
Good work bro. That helps a lot. Thanks for sharing.
@janmenzinga6 ай бұрын
Very interesting! I have a Cessna switchbox which has no letters/lines/digits on it. I could make a new frontplate with your method. What program you used to do this job? I'm not good at designing yet... best regards from The Netherlands.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Hi, I use Fusion 360. Takes a little getting used to but worth the effort as it's very rewarding what you can learn to create!
@uncleronny67486 ай бұрын
I would use a wide roller tip on my pinstriper tool before I went through all that. They're not cheap but they work and save a ton of time.
@paulfitzgerald4933 Жыл бұрын
A latex or rubber coated glove may also help rubbing it off.
@letrainavapeur6 ай бұрын
Try one of the silicone mastic tools to press the mastic into the letters and clean up afterwards, they remove excess mastic completely from tiles and worktops
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Thanks. Just been googling that. If the letter surface isn’t smooth, but curved with layer ridges will it still be as effective?
@barrycraig1549 Жыл бұрын
I've been using regular spackle not the quick dry or lightweight. You put it on like frosting making sure it's all the way into the crevices. Let it get dry overnight. Sand the Spackle off and use a damp cloth or toothbrush. Personally I've been spraying my 3D prints with a clear coat
@serge933 Жыл бұрын
What about using thinned enamel or other type of paint, put in a syringe and squeezed into the lettering grooves?
@rc-fannl73646 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing, it sounds like that might be less work, right?
@steve63756 ай бұрын
Those little tin pots of Humbrol enamel paint used for painting models. That stuff really sticks well. Clean off or thin down using white spirit.
@TheYear25255 ай бұрын
Will Fae liquid also work? Or Pixie liquid? Or how about liquefied Pixies?
@davidvee90706 ай бұрын
me again...forgot to mention a way to get various colours that are not available in silicon from previous reply!!!!- i used acryilic paint ,any colour, mixed it with the silicon, enough to get the colour i needed, RGB, red blue yellow black can make close to any colour you want
@jonnysegway78667 ай бұрын
Thanks Alan
@Deses7 ай бұрын
That looks much easier that acrylic painting or swapping filament mid print!
@SelfPropelledDestiny17 күн бұрын
Could you not just print the letters as a separate file and then glue them into the embossed holes? Might take a slight resizing I suppose but once you figure it out it'd be golden...
@electronics.unmessed6 ай бұрын
Nice! Thx for sharing. I tried something like this with extrudes text, but this looks much better. Maybe you could also use that white paint, that car fans are using to pimp the tires.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Tippex/whiteout is pretty good. Best probably is acrylic caulk as it wipes off easiest
@electronics.unmessed6 ай бұрын
@@AuthentiKit will try that definitely! Thx.
@stevedobson78376 ай бұрын
That's a fantastic tip, thanks.
@garyvanremortel52186 ай бұрын
White epoxy ink has been used to fill engraved panels on military equipment for over half a century. Why change?
@kallewirsch22636 ай бұрын
Since I don't mind having the letters a little bit sunken and my lettering is in a plane parallel to the build plate, I do it the following way: I let the printer come up to the plane of the lettering, switch the filament to white, let the printer continue for 2 or 3 layers, switch back to black and print 2 or 3 layers in black with the letters not filled in. (Yes, that leaves a thin white strip around the periphery also, but I don't mind)
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
30 seconds with a black sharpie sorts the white line. That's another approach I've considered.
@dirkhaar22434 ай бұрын
@6:10 I was awaiting for the Bob Ross taking over the voice.
@robertpeters94386 ай бұрын
What about using the white tape and heated stylus libraries use?
@markgiles85276 ай бұрын
That looks awesome. 😊
@mfeldheim6 ай бұрын
Great idea, thanks for sharing
@senseisecurityschool93376 ай бұрын
I wonder, if the letters would stay in even more reliably with one tweak. If the letters had a very small amount of negative chamfer, so the bottom of the groove is about one line width larger the top. Then once the silicone dries, it "can't" come out - it won't through the top of the groove.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
I like it!
@danilkister16503 ай бұрын
Why not print a bit of excess material, fill up with whatever paint, and sand off the top layer including the grooves?
@AuthentiKit3 ай бұрын
Could work - personally I hate sanding
@fram11114 ай бұрын
you think you can 3-D print a fully functioning PF1 Mustang because I think it would be awesome to put on VR headset look through the cockpit see the elevation speed and everything and fly from a VR headset now that would get my juices flowing and if you could do that maybe join in with someone else a group of people perhaps I might be a patriot
@AuthentiKit4 ай бұрын
@@fram1111 that project is well underway
@aelfric55786 ай бұрын
I know there are some layer lines as you pointed out, but the surface is remarkably smooth. What orientation did you print these?
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Just regular orientation as you’d expect.
@WatchesTrainsAndRockets6 ай бұрын
Have you tried ironing the top layer of thr print to reduce the filament ridges?
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Could help yes, though when the top has a gentle curve i think it would be marginal
@tenlittleindians6 ай бұрын
A crinkle finish black paint would hide the layer lines and defects before the white.
@RocketHurricane6 ай бұрын
I remember Fairly Liquid. They had some minor rock hits back in the 70s
@matthewharrison38136 ай бұрын
Interesting idea, though I would have enjoyed a 5 minute condensed version of the video more. Thanks for the upload.
@AndrewAHayes6 ай бұрын
It would be possible to redesign the parts to accept a 3D printed disc insert with the text printed as the first layer in mirror mode, either a multi material system or just manual filament changes can be employed. and then glue the disc to the part, the text and the disc could be printed with a shiny glass like finish or a textured finish by using either a textured PEI bed or a smooth PEI bed. This would be a much easier method of production.
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
.. or a print of white plastic sandwiched between the black so it shows through the letter cutouts?
@nkronert6 ай бұрын
Would it be possible to print the black part, then switch to white filament and print the letters into it?
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
It's on a curve so no, otherwise yes you could
@ersdds16 ай бұрын
There is a chemical call PVA poly vinyl acetate whis is used as mold releasing agent. I think that would make your job much quicker and cleaner. It is certainly more expensive than your fairy liquid but time is money and i think your overall results would improve.
@dirceuh6 ай бұрын
PVA is also the formula of simple plain white scholar glue. Since it may became transparent when dried, maybe it is neccessary to add some white pigment to it (maybe some household item like gipsy or corstarch would do?), but it may get the job done. Other option a litte more expensive but faster is use 3d uv resin with white pigment. Apply it, clear the excess, expose to sunlight and it cures in a few seconds.
@unclerichard67296 ай бұрын
Almost like @josephpk4878 I like to use casting resin applied with a needle. Hobby Lobby has little bottles, I think in the model paint area, that have needle type applicators that worked well on my last project.
@Karaon6 ай бұрын
I suppose for letters that big I would try using a ballpen corrector (dont know the name). preferably the one that acts like a pen as well, not the bottled up with a brush or the tape one of course. And for any other flat surface good old spray and flat piece of paper to get rid of the recess + 15 minutes sanding. Still a nice idea but the time and effort just doesn't make it a good option for myself. Maybe if I needed something fancy
@Karaon6 ай бұрын
OH and anything that melts like wax and can be done using a hot glue gun and scraped off flat if neccesary
@AuthentiKit6 ай бұрын
Each to their own i guess. I’d hate to do all that sanding. Ive tried the tippex whiteout. Not bad in certain situations when the nozzle is narrow enough.
@ytalanwms6 ай бұрын
CAD software - Place lettering on the design. Bambu LAB printer can color in the letters. Then simply print the product. I appreciate the efforts here, but there are better ways.
@Jim_One-wl4ke6 ай бұрын
That’s a cool idea. I am favoring a more precise laser engraving n paint .Thanks for your sharing..❤
@speedyfpv71042 жыл бұрын
I'm so excited for the P51 parts! I should recieve my 3d printer next week and can't wait to get started. I'm having a hard time finding the "rig" on amazon in the US. The only ones I find have one single clamp. I feel I might regret that if I buy it. 😕