I've recently been experimenting with Acrylic modeling paste. This stuff is THICK! However, it can be thinned with water. You can apply it with a brush easily. The real party trick is once its dry, to get some water and a low grit sanding sponge. The water will "re-activate" the paste a little allowing you to sand/move the putty around to smooth it further. Works pretty well and is less "chemically" to other options. Also, it sands REALLY well.
@B1OD5 ай бұрын
Nice idea and Kmart in Australia have 500ml for $8. I'll be trying this ASAP. Thanks
@radishdalek5 ай бұрын
Some people mix it with IPA instead, until its reached the consistency where its self levelling and then paint it on in two coats.
@ernieoporto11115 ай бұрын
@@B1OD Today I learned Kmart is still alive lol
@JeremyBlackston5 ай бұрын
@@radishdalek I had heard that. Will give it a shot.
@petershalaka34935 ай бұрын
MTN has been at Officeworks for a while. However, I found that Graffiti stores usually sell the cans for 2-3 bucks cheaper.
@incogneato7905 ай бұрын
There is a setting I've found really helps eliminate layer lines while printing. In Cura, under Walls, the Outer Wall Inset distance is the key. I set mine to 0.2mm and print at 0.12mm layer height and the results are very much like a resin print. You get better surface detail too.
@micahbogue60315 ай бұрын
Ohhhhh, you mean to say, Change the width of the outer wall, and make it thinner? That sounds like a great idea to try, thanks!
@incogneato7905 ай бұрын
@@micahbogue6031 Technically, it doesn't make the outer wall thinner, it moves it inward by the amount of the setting, overlapping the inside wall. So in effect the outer wall is thinner, and there is more squish against the 2nd outermost wall. You can really see the difference when printing a mini for D&D.
@Ferienpapst5 ай бұрын
@@incogneato790sounds good. I have to check if in Bambu lab there is also such option to change
@petmaniacattack5 ай бұрын
@@Ferienpapst let me know if you find it!
@DollsandEverythingElse5 ай бұрын
@@FerienpapstI’m just setting my A1 up so I’d love to know too.
@calebb51065 ай бұрын
for note, i use to do bodywork all day everyday, mostly fiberglass i HIGHLY recommend 3m goggle gear 500 safety goggles. Not only are they inexpensive, so everyone can get them, but the lens is also replaceable if you want to have back ups incase you break or scratch them, the gg 500 is D4 rated and should be more than enough here, but if you want to be extra sure go for the gg 2890 safety goggles that are D5 rated (fine dust), which are also over the glasses goggles for all you glasses needing folk for the face masks/resperators my single use go to is the 3m specialty particulate respirators 8000, its an N95, P100, P95, R95 rated mask and worked quite well in my very dusty environment, and it had an breath exhalation valve so it didn't get too hot. for reusable resperators i very quickly fell in love with the half face rr 6300, as it could be set up for vapors and fumes like when i was painting cars, or dust of all types, it had replaceable cartridges so you just gotta pick the one that suits best for you
@MiaogisTeasАй бұрын
These are TOP TIER TIPS 🥇
@viktornicht2605 ай бұрын
My godness, Angus... I used to watch you like 10 years ago and actually learned English by watching your stuff! It's been so long and it's just great to see you're still putting out great 3D printing content. Cheers & stay awesome
@DigitalConfusion12 күн бұрын
@@viktornicht260 *goodness
@TheAruruu5 ай бұрын
if you need a high gloss finish on a part, i STRONGLY recommend getting yourself the hobbyist set of MicroMesh pads. these things can take a print from looking like well... a painted piece of plastic, to looking like it's dyed glass. Best part is, unlike sand paper which can actually be quite aggressive in how much material it removes, MicroMesh is very gentle on the parts, so you can retain sharp edges.
@anettebianca6855Ай бұрын
MicroMesh is amazing ♥
@peterkallend50125 ай бұрын
I recently printed something in a color I absolutely loved, so priming and painting weren't options. I knocked off the major surface blemishes with 100grit, evened out the surface with 250, then smoothed it out incrementally using 500 - 3000. It left a really cool, brushed finish Werth the layer lines looking like the grain of the material. To smooth it all out and make it all shiny, I used neutral shoe polish and basically spit shining the entire thing before sealing it a few coats of liquid floor polish. It's totally smooth, lost no detail, I can see my reflection in it, it smells surprisingly good, it's totally water proof and I didn't lose the color of the filament. I would definitely use this technique again, as the end result was definitely worth the time investment.
@TheSixthRagnarok5 ай бұрын
you should do a video on this!
@TheSixthRagnarok5 ай бұрын
What brand of liquid floor polish did you use? how many coats? etc
@peterkallend50125 ай бұрын
@@TheSixthRagnarok the brand doesn't matter (is basically just clear wax) and neither do the number of coats. As anyone whose ever polished their shoes to a high shine knows, you apply thin layers and go until it's as shiny as you want/need it to be.
@TheSixthRagnarok5 ай бұрын
@@peterkallend5012 so what helps more to fill in and hide your layer lines? The wax or the floor polish? lol
@squidcaps43084 ай бұрын
I've made wind and brass instrument parts from black PLA: they really come out looking like ebony wood, which is a huge bonus. They also feel luxurious, smooth and silky, there is a nice warmth in the material when you touch it. I use water at each stage, including the rougher grits to keep temperature down. Add a bit of dish soap in the "coolant" and you can use some power tools, carefully of course. As long as there is plenty of that "coolant" in there, you can go surprisingly fast but as anyone knows who has tried it: the risk of ruining the surface for good is great. I use car wax as finisher, after two polishing compounds..
@chuckthetekkie5 ай бұрын
When sanding, I would HIGHLY recommend wearing some sort of gloves as you really do not want any of those fine particles getting into your pores. I used to have no issues sanding or filing ABS prints but now I get a reaction and get very itchy so wearing gloves is a really good idea.
@MakersMuse5 ай бұрын
Very good point!
@KeithGroover5 ай бұрын
For the parts I make, my preference is to use "fuzzy skin" on prusaslicer, then sand the part a little bit. It almost completely takes away the layer lines and makes it have a nice texture that feels like a sand-blasted injection molded part.
@bzqp25 ай бұрын
huh, might try it once.
@roofoofighter5 ай бұрын
Would fuzzy skin help on top gently curved surfaces though?
@KeithGroover5 ай бұрын
@@roofoofighter It does, because the little spikes go outward horizontally, so they end up masking the layer lines. And once you sand it just a little bit, nothing intense, it has this like nice textured smooth feel. You can also set it to be fuzzier in certain layers than others, so you can really play around with it. Ultimately, I would much rather get the machine to do as much work as possible on the front end so I don't have to get tennis elbow sanding plastic.
@tobymdev4 ай бұрын
this
@MrSlipstreem3 ай бұрын
I came here to say the same thing. It increases print time, but by far less than the postprocessing time it saves.
@DrGeta6665 ай бұрын
Another tip if you want to sand a print but don’t want to paint it and want to keep the original look of the filament you can rub Vaseline into the print where you have sanded and it will remove the white sanding marks back to original colour.
@rynnjacobs86015 ай бұрын
Wet-sanding has advantages: The water binds the dust and cools the object, so much more clean and no risk to soften PLA during sanding.
@roofoofighter5 ай бұрын
Wood filler is great for filling layer lines, it’s water based so it’s easy to clean up, dries fast, relatively cheap, and easy to sand to a smooth finish.
@12nightmare344 ай бұрын
This is what I use, it's great stuff. I printed the Blade of Chaos in full scale and used wood filler to hide the gaps between the parts. Came out a treat.
@anettebianca6855Ай бұрын
thank you for that - was looking for the best option -
@TheFast22118 күн бұрын
Miz the wood filler with a bit of acetone for a really easy way to apply it
@roofoofighter11 күн бұрын
@ interesting. Although I prefer not using chemicals if I don’t have to.
@sprN0VA5 ай бұрын
For anyone who wants to avoid the "orange peel" look after painting, you will need to wet-sand the paint. If you want to take it a step further and make the part look amazing, you can add clear coat, but you will - you guessed it - need to wet-sand to avoid orange peel. This definitely works best for larger surfaces, though. Since spraying paint and clear coat will fill in most fine details.
@zog69405 ай бұрын
To add to this, 2k (1k works too) automotive clear coat will be exponentially better at protecting things than clear coat you get at a hobby store. Especially if you're coating things that get handled often. I made a 3d printed hitbox-style controller, and it would look disgusting right now if I hadn't used 2k clear coat. Any brand should be fine.
@LeftoverBeefcake5 ай бұрын
+1 for wet sanding
@Iisakki30005 ай бұрын
With a decent can of spray paint you can get a good finish by spraying thick enough layers.
@zog69405 ай бұрын
@@Iisakki3000 And lose any/all fine detail. Not trying to make paint blobs.
@anguismemes16665 ай бұрын
Or maybe you paint it correctly so you don't need to wet sand
@aaronalquiza96805 ай бұрын
i tried printing with translucent PETG and sanded up to 1000 grit and worked out pretty well. i also used a dremel in some areas for quicker sanding.
@MarkusArkus55 ай бұрын
If you have seams from joining multiple parts together, I highly recommend using a watered down wood filler to paint over both surfaces and sand down to make it look like one continuous piece. It is way cheaper than glaze, doesn't have any fumes, and sands SUPER easily so you can be pretty liberal in your application. I would reccomend Dap's Plastic Wood as a starting product to compare to (I know it is in the US, may not be global). Additional tip, add the wood filler to a disposable container and then add small amounts of water and stir until it becomes easily smearable. Add very little at a time, it takes less water than you think and you want it to easily spread, not run.
@cykubis68665 ай бұрын
If you have access to a sand blasting cabinet, blasting with soda is a phenomenal replacement to sanding. I use it particularly with resins, but it works great with PLA and PETG without the friction melting anything and gets into the nooks and crannies better than sanding ever can. Typically I just blast the model evenly for a few minutes then soak and rinse in water. Depending on the aesthetic I'm going for, I'll either hit it with clear coat for a gloss finish or I'll leave it as it and rub a tiny bit of WD-40 on it so the model keeps the texture but the WD-40 clears up the remaining whiting effect from blasting.
@joeltorres32025 ай бұрын
Soda you mean baking soda?
@MiaogisTeasАй бұрын
This was my question, and you answered it!
@creativecraving24 күн бұрын
One of the best explanations of how to sand and paint a part, even though that wasn't even the focus of the script! Thanks!
@tammasus5 ай бұрын
I’ve been using sodium bicarbonate commonly used for removing smells in refrigerators with 3d resin to thicken it up. I got the idea from when I used it with crazy glue to make it harden faster.
@cameronrodwell21375 ай бұрын
Thankyou for doing this from an Aussie perspective it is nice to be able to find stuff in our country based off of what you are talking about.
@Momijizukamori5 ай бұрын
Polymaker sells an 'easy sand' PLA they call CosPLA which I decided to try recently and have fallen in love with - it prints like regular PLA but the plastic is slightly softer so it takes sanding much more readily - I've been doing 150 -> 220 -> 400 with no fillers at all and getting totally smooth parts fairly quickly, on par with working with pine or similar. For people in the US (and I think Canada?), for a spray filler/primer, my go-to has been the Duplicolor filler/primer sold at most chain auto parts stores. It's kind of pricey (~$18 USD a can) but both the build and the adhesion are far superior to any of the other filler/primer sprays I've tried.
@DrGeta6665 ай бұрын
For TPU I can get rid of all layer lines by heating up some kind of rounded smooth clean metal like a screw driver. Heat it up to about 70 degrees on a stove or any heat source that does not make soot. And rub it back and forth over the print really REALLY fast. Like moving your arm back and forth 10 times a second. But just let the metal lightly rest on the TPU while it’s whipping back and forth. Feel the surface and see where it needs more smoothing in bursts of like 5 seconds on. 10 seconds off: it slowly melts the top layer completely smooth without changing its shape or anything. It really is just the layer lines that go and I print at 0.28.
@Dr.Fluffles5 ай бұрын
You can get a temperature controllable soldering iron for less than 40 dollars which could ease that process, too. It's the method I've been practicing with, with the bonus that it allows welding parts and adding material via scrap or raw filaments.
@DrGeta6665 ай бұрын
@@Dr.Fluffles yeah I have a high end hakko that I kept a spare rod just for that but I found it oxidised too quickly and solder on there obviously wouldn’t work so I find it need to be stainless steel.
@bartz0rt9285 ай бұрын
It's not always an option, but I prefer to try to design and orient my prints in a way that they'll look good with the layer lines being visible. I've also found that matte colors hide those lines quite well, so that can be a consideration in the material choice. Playing with top and bottom infill patterns can also enhance the look of a "raw" print. Having said that, most of my prints have so far been fairly utilitarian, so they don't need to not look like 3D prints. What I _have_ been doing is adding design flourishes that make a print look nicer: chamfered or rounded edges, shadow lines, embossed or debossed patterns, text or logos, that sort of thing. I've learned a few simple tricks (most of 'em on this channel) that do much more to improve the look of a print than any amount of sanding and painting would. As long as you're not deliberately mimicking the look of something else, like you would with a prop, "designing for 3D printing" can also mean taking the esthetics into account.
@AZREDFERN5 ай бұрын
Most spray paints that advertise they work great on plastic, have a heavy acetone base (at least in the US). So any plastic that can be dissolved by acetone, like ABS, will not only get a great bond, but smooth and bulk up the surface slightly. It’s not effective on other plastics like PLA and PETG. It’ll still stick like paint. But you’re not getting the same bond and none of the smoothing.
@MakersMuse5 ай бұрын
huh interesting! I'll have to look more into that.
@astrophysicistguy5 ай бұрын
I make a LOT of cosplay weapons with extreme attention to screen accuracy. Here's my process: 1) use a high quality printer like my PRUSA i3 Mark 3 and XL and print at .15mm layer height. My prints usually come out ready for primer with no sanding required! It pays for itself in the amount of time you save in NOT having to prep a model, 2) use Bondo spot glazing putty to fill in obvious layer lines or supports areas gaps ... pro tip - this stuff is acetone based so you can squeeze some in a cup and add a little bit of acetone and now you can paint on the glazing putty which enables you to cover large areas quickly! 3) sand glazing putty areas with 220 sand paper , 4) 2-3 coats of Rustoleum 2 in 1 filler sandable primer, 5) wet sand with 320 (most layer lines should be gone with this step but repeat if necessary), 6) 2nd round of the same primer,, 7) wet sand with 600. Repeat steps 4-7 until part is perfectly smooth and it looks like a mirror. You are now ready to paint. Note if you are doing large pieces like say Mandalorian armor you'll want to use 'guide coats' along with the primer to ensure the part is finished perfectly smooth with no high or low spots. Using this process people are always amazed that my props are plastic and not metal. Of course you need to have some skill with an airbrush or rattle cans but that's for another video.
@kohtalaisenleveahomer5 ай бұрын
Acrylic gesso can be a good option if you want a smooth surface quickly. The surface needs to be sanded rough first and I recommend water sanding. PLA in particular will clog the sandpaper in no time. If you use an ordinary brush to apply gesso, it is easy to leave brush marks. I don't know what the right word for the technique is, in Finnish it's called "töpöttäminen" but the idea is to stipple the surface with gesso. I recommend a foam brush or a wash sponge, a magic sponge gives an even finer texture. This leaves a smooth texture that can be sanded even smoother. Depending on how thick the gesso is, a few coats are enough and you can apply acrylic paint and acrylic varnish in the same way.
@vvhitevvabbit64795 ай бұрын
If you want a glassy smooth finish, I highly recommend wet sanding with a high grit sandpaper after a couple coats of primer. You can also wet sand clear coat if you choose to use it.
@coffeefish47435 ай бұрын
A rule of thumb is to always use a lower grit before painting if your paint is thick, the paint will fill in the groves and leave a surface finish comprable to high grit, but it will stick much better. Generally you should only use a very high grit (>300) if you are going for a polish and not paint on top.
@hazonku5 ай бұрын
That old smoothing prints video was the very first video of yours I ever watched shortly after I got my first printer. I too am a huge fan of the MTN Hardcore line, including that exact orange. I painted one of my drone frames with that.
@RvnKnight2 ай бұрын
Full on heat reflow works well too. Print it in 100% infill, pack it in casting sand, heat it up to where the part just starts to melt. It will be much stronger and smoother when it has cooled back down. Also handy if you don't want to risk glue failure of the part and removes seam lines.
@Armour3dPrints5 ай бұрын
A great alternative to talcum powder is corn starch. I use it to thicken resin when I apply it to prints for smoothing
@nismocapri15 ай бұрын
Not that it's a problem in OZ but here in NZ where it's a bit cooler I'll get a bucket of hot water and heat the cans before spraying, been doing this for years with my car parts. Pro tip: Get a magnet and use it to hold the can upright so the nozzle doesn't get wet. When you grab the can just pull it up and the magnet holds against the rim of the bucket and falls to the floor as you remove the can saves time pulling it off. BTW been watching you for a few years now strangely ever since I got my 3d printer. Thanks for the great info!
@RoseKindred5 ай бұрын
As an alternative to Talcum powder, I use baby powder. I haven't tried cornstarch, but I have read of others using it. You can still get talc powder, it is helpful for laser engraving on reflective surfaces as it lets the camera pick up the object easier, so it is not completely impossible to get.
@carboneagle5 ай бұрын
I've used cornstarch and it works well.
@Avendesora5 ай бұрын
If your baby powder isn't made of talc, it's probably either corn starch or potato starch.
@LaurentPerrinlolo5 ай бұрын
How about fumed silica (cabosil?). It's commonly used to thicken epoxy.
@truantray5 ай бұрын
Another option is diatomaceous earth powder.
@andrecook42685 ай бұрын
0.06mm layer height and the 'Gunze Mr Surfacer' works great on smaller prints. I use it on DnD terrain, fills in the layer lines good but keeps the detail I want. No sanding! They just released a water based one that I'm hopefully trying tomorrow.
@thesledgehammerblog5 ай бұрын
I've been doing some printing lately using Polymaker CosPLA filament, which is designed to be easier to sand layer lines out of than regular PLA. It does seem to work pretty well for parts that have large surfaces without a lot of detail, but I've found that small details can get lost easily if you aren't careful with how you sand the part. It's also only available in a neutral grey so you'd only be able to use it on parts that you're planning to paint.
@feelincrispy70535 ай бұрын
I recently used corn flour as a resin thickener on my model boat for corner fillets. It might not be ideal but it worked very well in my scenario, is super cheap, easily sourced, isn’t carcinogenic and it sanded very smooth. I was going to use baby powder but it’s full of perfumes and what not. The only thing you need to be carful of is corn flour water absorption. If it’s container is left open it will absorb water from the air severely contaminating the resin.
@timm75247 күн бұрын
Fantastic! The most useful tip might be print orientation. Somehow I've not thought of that for FDM printing. D'oh! 80% of the time that alone might be enough and costs only patience. And you're so right, it's worth the printing time to save finishing time. Worth noting this affects the strength of the part, depending on the layer lines. (Never heard of bog spray! Cool.)
@MaxPowerzs5 ай бұрын
I dunno if we have spray putty here in the US (someone let me know if we do!) but my go-to has been Rust-Oleum 2 in 1 filler primer spray. I prefer wet-sanding using blocks instead of paper and i usually go up to 1500 grit block in areas where I need a super smooth finish. Lastly after painting, spray a clear-coat on for protection and those come in matte, satin, or gloss so choose the one that matches whatever finish you plan on needing Thansk for the great video Angus!
@DadofScience5 ай бұрын
I thought it was just me that hated the layered result of 3D prints so I appreciate the advice and experience. While enclosures and other utility objects or parts I spray with PCB conformal laqueur to make them stronger and more waterproof (I don't make much else TBH) when I do something decorative, like Minecraft models for the kids, it's nice to be able to finish them off to look like a bought one. Thanks Angus, and all the best from Perth. 😄
@sddreamcrystalАй бұрын
I've attempted to use the wood fillers for 3D prints because some of those can be smooth down with water, but problem often was with applying the fuller since it's a paste. My only hang up was trying to sand organic shapes (example: a dog model with some sculpted textures) and my inpatients with seeing very little progress done with sanding as in the past that was mostly what people suggested doing... just sanding and no fillers to try and smooth a surface. I might see if I can find something similar to the spray stuff here in the US when I get back to 3D printing more often
@MarinusMakesStuff5 ай бұрын
So you asked for a talcum replacement. I'm not 100% sure, but you could always try a small batch with 'maizena', this is basically cornstarch. It's normally used to thicken food items but I don't know why it wouldn't work on resin.
@eruiluvatar2365 ай бұрын
I have experimented a bit with making ABS solutions in acetone and coating PLA with them (a brieff dunk and letting them dry in open air). I really liked the result, no or minimal detail loss and a nice glossy finish. Although you could kind of faintly tell that the layer lines where there. I believe that tuning the concentration and maybe sanding could fully remove the layer lines with no detail loss.
@AlexJaneway5 ай бұрын
I can recommend luthier scrapers and mini luthier scrapers, for PLA, you can scrape off a lot of lines quickly, which makes for a whole lot less sanding.
@michael1401695 ай бұрын
I found that wet sanding pla prints avoids heating up the print and no dust either. Car shops have a good range of that type of sand paper in rough to very fine grit.
@DonVintaggio3 ай бұрын
7:40 the BIG problem with that orientation is that you get a very weak structure that will break at the first sanding; keep in mind the Z axis, the direction in which every layer of filament is deposited, is the easiest to separate when you apply force along the vertical axis.
@fc3d7485 ай бұрын
I’ve been using an 50/50 mix of acetone and blade putty for an initial paint on. I let it dry sand then use spray putty, been getting good results on helmets
@andyb77545 ай бұрын
Very interesting video. One thing you forgot in your PPE was gloves. Wear gloves to keep you hand body oil of of whatever you plan on painting (never bare hand touch the part your going to paint after using wax & grease remover). You can wash your hands but you'll still have normal body oil. Thank you for the informational video
@_Piers_5 ай бұрын
I've used the Proxxen Pensander on all types of plastic and it works great. I'm sure you could melt PLA with it if you tried, but it doesn't under sensible use and just sands perfectly.
@gsargent19705 ай бұрын
I use elmers wood putty which is water based so you can thin it to the consistency you want with just water. Then apply with a plastic paddle or paint brush depending on the consistency. It dries in about 20 minutes so you can do multiple coat/sand layers in very little time. After I get it to where I want I spray with rustoleum 2 and 1 primer/filler then do a damp sand, I say damp as you don't want a ton of water or if you sand through the primer/filler it will reactivate the wood putty.
@sjmaguirepdx5 ай бұрын
I usually keep two UV resins on hand for smoothing prints. One right out of the bottle for fine detail and another thickened with cornstarch based baby powder. I have also heard of people using fumed silica for thickening resin but I have yet to try it. Another handy filler is Bondo glazing and spot filler. It's an air cured putty. It can also be thinned with acetone to be applied with a brush. The acetone also helps it cure faster. Both UV resin and the spot filler can be further smoothed with sanding.
@brunobock3725 ай бұрын
I tend to do more abs prints since my university lab has a ton of it lying around. And my favorite way to make it smooth is just hit it with the soldering iron like I'm spreading butter. It works well when the layers are thick and coarse but when it's really fine it's usually unnecessary. Then just sand and file it, then brush some acetone once or twice over the surface to get that shine. If you get good at the soldering iron "spreading" you can get the same results from a .4 or .5 layer height than a .2 or .15
@CP-zu5pi4 ай бұрын
Like the slicers have a seam smoothing option in them. It's actually pretty good, you'll still need to finish your print by hand but by simply enabling ironing it can remove a lot of banding for a small time cost.
@MarcsYoutube5 ай бұрын
If you want your PLA parts to look and feel smooth, without loosing the initial material colour, here's what I do. First I file down any rough spots and layer lines. Small metal files work quicker than sanding paper. Once the part looks smoother, but still has medium to small imperfections, I coat it with a thin layer of CA glue. CA glue is inexpensive and dries quickly. Don't inhale the fumes! Once dry, the CA glue layer needs to be sanded back almost completely, like you would automotive body filler. You can work your way up through the grits from 150 to 400 or even 600. You'll be left with a super smooth, mat finish and the PLA colour is still very similar to how it was at the beginning. If you want the part to be glossy or semi glossy, you can optionally spray-paint it with an appropriate transparent top coat.
@stoinercraft63895 ай бұрын
i tried the ca method, it seems much harder than pla when it comes to sanding
@dareka94255 ай бұрын
I have been thinking about using CA glue this way but never got around it to actually applying it. My go to brand of CA glue is sold in tubes so I wasn't sure how to apply to large surfaces. I only recently discovered a new CA glue brand that comes in small bottles that has special brushes.
@crazylegsmurphy5 ай бұрын
@@stoinercraft6389 Sanding CA glue is a nightmare. I wouldn't recommend this technique. It's also costly.
@collie1475 ай бұрын
I've tried the CA glue on some smaller parts with 0.05 layer height and it works well. The cheaper the better as you want stuff that really liquidy and doesn't activate too quickly.
@joeltorres32025 ай бұрын
But why ca glue when there are products for this.
@kearneyanimation4 ай бұрын
That spray putty is something I've never seen before! One chemical combo I've seen a lot of people use is wood filler and acetone 2:1 which creates a similar sand-able surface
@gallahant3 ай бұрын
I will be buying my first 3d printer soon and I want to try using model hobby surface primers. The best ones are from Mr Hobby. They are self levelling and very thin, when applied through an airbrush. I believe my experience in modelling will come in handy if I want to smooth and paint parts that I print.
@fireant2024 ай бұрын
All finishing is a lot of work at the end of the day. I've only bothered to do it properly a couple times but it does look great. Choosing the right filament can make a difference too. The piece I'm most proud of is the popular Trex skull model you can easily find online. I printed it in wood PLA, sanded it, stained it, then prayed with clear varnish and it came out looking great. You can barely tell it's 3D printed. My only regret is I didn't think about the PPE and microplastics till more recently and I did most of that work completely unprotected!
@EvilSpyBoy5 ай бұрын
I have been using the UV resin trick it gets close to a mirror finish on some parts after some wet and dry sanding. The alternative to powder is some people have talked about using flour. I have not tried that yet but regardless you have to do multiple thin coats so you can cute with a light as you go.
@reborneuk5 ай бұрын
For resin printed support nubs I have a set of riffler files. They work quickly, give a decent finish to work on and best of all their shapes let you get into nooks and crannies. Don't get cheap ones though, definitely worth investing on at least a mid range set.
@yannicnoack5389Ай бұрын
The best I have found is so far in terms of premium feel, look and ease of application is plasti dip spray painting (rubber spray paint). No sanding required, easy application and is available in many finishes and colours.
@abates37475 ай бұрын
particularly for larger surfaces, the best thing is "spot and glazing putty" used in automotive painting. Dries really fast and is the same sanding ability as primer.
@proaudiorestore89265 ай бұрын
I watched that episode when you released it 😂 you were, and still are, incredibly helpful! It’s been a good few years now!
@lukerickert52035 ай бұрын
Wet sanding PLA makes a huge difference, it will give a very nice finish without too much work
@EngineeringVignettes5 ай бұрын
I tend to sand a bit less initially and fill the layer gaps with automotive glazing putty. Small parts can be hard to sand on so going for something that builds up to the peaks of the layers gets the part smoother faster. Then a high-build primer to start making it better. A really smooth prime layer makes the paint job much better.
@reneberthold3348 күн бұрын
I use UV Resin for coating all the time. Small detailed surfaces can be smoothed with a small brush and than sanded with 400-600 grit Sandpaper. The best part is that this make parts watertight (for RC boats).
@svpetarSR5 ай бұрын
Thnak you for a video! The best resin filler is kaolin. It is the clay used to make ceramic tiles. Unlike talc, calcium carbonate (marble) and the like, kaolin absorbs resin in its pores [this contributes to a much greater thixotropic effect. The only problem is that you can't use a white coating because it stains the resin.
@XaadeTheBlade5 ай бұрын
I don't know if it would work for 3d prints, but Citadel's Chaos Black is what I use for models. That stuff is strong. If I mess up a coat above, I can generally just sand through and 90% of the time, the base coat is preserved.
@punishedprops5 ай бұрын
Really great tips Angus!
@bzqp25 ай бұрын
Huh, a celebrity with 2 upvotes. :D
@kellyjean49815 ай бұрын
Great advice. I’ve added cornstarch aka cornflour to epoxy to thicken it
@BiscuitWaite5 ай бұрын
If you're looking for a thickener for your resin a favored technique with woodworkers is to add fine wood powder. I would think the same would apply and it would make the surface easier to sand and wouldn't require as much sanding to get the desired finish.
@MOVIEKICKS5 ай бұрын
For smaller parts what about using a tumbler w/ the right size / material grit inside to smooth the parts? Tumblers are used to smooth stones so maybe the application can be applied to smoothing 3d parts w/ some modification?
@zog69405 ай бұрын
I personally think a spot putty (like bondo) is a better alternative to the spray version you used. No aerosol, so PPE isn't AS big of a concern. And it's so easy to slap a little bit onto a printed part, and smooth it over in a matter of minutes. But, some form of sanding and filling will almost certainly give the best looking finished product.
@roofoofighter5 ай бұрын
Bondo is really stinky. I prefer wood filler, it’s water based, doesn’t smell, and it sands really well .
@zog69405 ай бұрын
@@roofoofighter The smell doesn't bother me at all. But to each their own.
@CapturedLayers2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I wish you could write down the steps and the materials you used so I could refer to text everytime. If you have a step by step written guide I would be more than happy to learn and use. Thanks again
@cameronnowell5 ай бұрын
I usually use the bumper filler from Autobahn but they were out of stock recenlty so i used the one you have in your vid from Super Cheap. It worked great but it reacted with parts i had super glued together and made them come apart, sometimes with a quite audible crack. I've also found timbermate wood filler is great fro filling in bigger gaps and joins before priming and sanding. Much easier cleanup and use that bog.
@jaanikaapa69255 ай бұрын
Millibutter: a crater of milliput and IPA. Mix. Good for a lot of things. Also use a surfacer like Mr. Surfacer with the "grit" numbers. Also with FDM you can scrape the surface and then sand it
@FireCrack5 ай бұрын
I know it's isopropyl alcohol, but literary every time I read these comments I have a temporary moment where I think someone is recommending the use of beer
@jaanikaapa69255 ай бұрын
@@FireCrack I have that exact feeling every time I type IPA. That's a good beer.
@tyrannicpuppy5 ай бұрын
I haven't really post-processed any of my 3D prints so far. The only exceptions being sanding a few edges to make things fit a little better. Most have been utility prints (drawers, scrapers, AMD parts, etc) and don't matter for appearance. The few display pieces I've done are mostly Stargate space ships, and the lines almost kind of add to the aesthetic. The crisis crossing directions on the F-302 wings as the sloped edge printed kind of looks amazing, with how the different layers catch the light. Atlantis is my next big planned print though, and that can't remain a single uniform colour like the grey ships have. So I think I'll put at least some of these tricks into action for the many towers on the city with their many windows and coloured border sections, rather than trying to print too many of them using multi-colour printing on the AMS. So I've bookmarked this to come back to when needed.
@ImolaS35 ай бұрын
3M filler for plastic (green stuff in big tubes) dries really quickly (a minute or two) and sands incredibly easily. I find this si much faster than the spray filler approach for smaller sites, but use the spray filler for larger ones
@LingJunZhang28 күн бұрын
Very nice video, thanks for sharing, have a queustion, can you wett sanding parts with spray putty you used in video? Thanks
@star_seraph5 ай бұрын
Casting Talc is still available! It's used as a release agent for silicone molds. Definitely a PPE required material though.
@sonosus5 ай бұрын
Talcum powder is often cut with corn starch to help it absorb moisture. I wonder if off the shelf baking corn flour could be used as a viable replacement.
@3DJapan5 ай бұрын
It can also help to use smaller layer height when printing. Most printers can do ss low as 0.08 or 0.04
@mephistosprincipium5 ай бұрын
spray putty something like this is what I was looking for and didn’t know about, thanks 🙏
@PutzHierNur5 ай бұрын
I like the look of 3D Prints!
@akhasshativeritsol19505 ай бұрын
I think it's very situational. There are parts and geometries where it's very attractive. In cosplay though, 3d printed parts are generally meant to imitate another material, and the texture is a dead give-away. Also, even when the layers look good, the seam rarely ever does
@HerbaMachina5 ай бұрын
Same like, I really don't understand the obsession over hating layer lines, it's really not that ugly, and also has a certain charm to it.
@Dr.Fluffles5 ай бұрын
There's another type of melt smoothing, that even has the benefit of being able to add material from scraps or raw filament to prevent deformation and weld parts, and that's thermal via soldering iron or another controllable heating tool, but it takes practice. I've had good results welding broken parts back together, and with small areas of smoothing, but it gets difficult over larger areas with a standard bit. I suspect flat woodburning bits would fair better.
@daspeed1984 ай бұрын
For anyone in the UK, I use halford knifing putty to smooth my prints, £3 a tube and it takes roughly 1 tube for a mando helmet (maybe a little more if you go crazy)
@mikekuijpers35625 ай бұрын
A great paint for both resin and pla priming is rustoelum from Bunnings I prefer they ultra flat black as a primer as it has a built in plastic primer and gives a great surface to paint details, but there other flat colours are good as well depending on your choice of final colour.
@jamiethomas183 ай бұрын
With Nylon prints I use Grey primer then CA glue to smooth the primer into the uneven recesses. Sand it and prime again. Works a treat
@MakersMuse3 ай бұрын
It sticks well to nylon? That's cool! Fdm printed or powder?
@jamiethomas183 ай бұрын
@@MakersMuse the nylon powder fused prints like you used to get from Shapeways. A heavy coat of primer , pour on a thin layer of CA glue spread it around to liquify the primer which you can then rub into the stepped recesses. It cures in a couple of minutes and is sandable. Only takes a couple of coats.
@elisebrinon52584 ай бұрын
I think you can switch talc with corn starch… I tried it with uv resin to thicken it and it worked well! Corn starch is a solution to many problems… 😅
@remotepinecone4 ай бұрын
smoothing nozzle attachment : tiny hot metal flap that can rotate around the nozzle to smooth a side flat. I think its plausible.
@spaycemuuse5 ай бұрын
Haven't read all the comments but something I use as a thickener for adhesives when working with prosthetic makeup is cab-o-sil. Horrible stuff to breathe in (wear a respirator) but it's fine enough that it should probably be good for thickening resin.
@dreamcazman5 ай бұрын
I still use acetone vapor for ABS parts, especially if it's something that I will be holding, like a game controller. For things like this, paint tends to rub off eventually. Having a clear epoxy over parts might be a viable alternative. I haven't gotten around to trying this yet.
@lordbinky4 ай бұрын
better than sanding if you have a large surface accessible is to use a cabinet scraper / card scraper. super fast for a nice finish that gives moves you far along the sanding path, or ready for painting.
@GeneralPurposeVehicl5 ай бұрын
If you are remaking an Injection Molded part and have access to the mold in some manner, you can rough out the part in FDM and use the mold to forge the part into the final shape.
@lupusk9productions5 ай бұрын
They sell these scrapers that just look like flat metal plates but the edges of them you can form into a small bur and scrape the part, it basically makes it so smooth when you scrape away the material versus endless sanding. Then you can probably do your finishing stuff after and make it look like a injection molded part. less sanding more quality and faster!
@TinaDanielsson5 ай бұрын
I use a small snap-off knife for scraping anything that isn't completely flat. It saves me loads of time! 🙂
@vincentlelong31065 ай бұрын
6:05 I don't know if there is a specific english name for it but I use corn flour for this. It's especially very useful to fill holes in hollowed models.
@rasmusvedel5 ай бұрын
I think it’d usually be called corn starch
@eliblessed5 ай бұрын
Corn starch! You can buy regular corn starch in the cooking isle (it is used as a thickener for sauces and soups), but most baby powder is now made with corn starch as well, and for bulking up resin it works just as well
@alexlucas95353 ай бұрын
There's these electric dead skin files for your feet that have a nice low rpm and often adjustable speed so they don't melt the plastic from excessive friction and you can use double sided tape to stick any grit sandpaper you wan to and if you've got a lot of big flat prints to sand for cosplay or whatever it's the best $15-30 you can spend. I used a foam pad of 400grit to smooth out between the ridges of a vase I printed and it came out really good without ruining the ridges or taken tens of hours to sand.
@mrlownotes5 ай бұрын
I always sand over a down-draft table connected to a half decent shop-vac. It keeps the dust from drifting everywhere in my garden workshop.
@vampirernightАй бұрын
What is the model being printed at 2:13?
@HesDeadJim3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. Nicely made and good tips. Also love the Bunnings bluey statue... Sold out before I could get one :(
@MakersMuse3 ай бұрын
Yeah I got the last one!
@linden17635 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip on the Spray Putty, looks like you can pick it up at SCA! Does bunnings have any equivalent products, I've often used Rustoleum filler primer in the past to mixed results
@norbertnamenlos77115 ай бұрын
I'd like to throw in electroplating as process as its partly similar but yields even more stunning results.
@miguellopez33925 ай бұрын
unless you are soaking it for days letting a thick layer build up the lines will show up even more visibly unless you sand.
@StephGV227 күн бұрын
I coat my prints with 3D printing resin and take a UV light to it. Most of the time it doesn't need sanding after that. Makes the prints waaaaay stronger too. It does have to be done in a really well ventilated room with at least nitrile gloves. If it does need sanding, multiple clear coat finishes can be applied, UVed, rinsed and repeat. Super fast.
@kmemz2 ай бұрын
Somewhere between the spray primer and resin, can you not brush on a two part automotive body filler? Instead of thickening it up with some kind of additive, you can mix it up in small batches to minimize waste, paint it on when it feels just right but before it's too cured to work with, then make another small batch, rinse and repeat until the model is coated, then sand it down to where you can just barely see the layer lines because the filler cures ridiculously quickly when mixed.