Notifications
Clear all

45° Printing without supports  

  RSS
Andrea
(@andrea-2)
New Member
45° Printing without supports

Hi all,
I've been at a local Maker faire, and the most amazing think was a 3d printer with 45° degree printing nozzle.

This is a similar model found in Internet:

The infinite axis is fine, but the 45° degrees Idea could be applied to an ideal MK4 with few modifications, and it removes the need of supports more or less in every situations.

They use a post processor for the G-code, so there's no need to change the slicer!

I think it worth a thought 😉

Posted : 04/08/2018 6:39 pm
JoanTabb
(@joantabb)
Veteran Member Moderator
Re: 45° Printing without supports

have to wait and see what prusa gets up to next!

you never know...

Joan

I try to make safe suggestions,You should understand the context and ensure you are happy that they are safe before attempting to apply my suggestions, what you do, is YOUR responsibility. Location Halifax UK

Posted : 06/08/2018 3:11 am
Jorg
 Jorg
(@jorg)
Estimable Member
Re: 45° Printing without supports

So many exciting things ahead... The innovation award at CES 2018 went to Ethereal, who developed a 5D printer (traditional 3D axes of freedom for movement + 2 rotational axes of freedom for the bed).
https://etherealmachines.com/products/halo
The video mainly shows off the CNC capabilities, but it also shows a complex printed object without the need for supports. They call the device "consumer oriented" and "desktop size". Although at $25000 and 1m³, I think both of these terms are still a bit of a stretch. 😀 But who knows in 5-10 years?
edit: it is not the first 5-axes 3D printer, Verashape also one, but the price point is the attraction.

Posted : 06/08/2018 8:57 pm
toaf
 toaf
(@toaf)
Noble Member
Re: 45° Printing without supports

ive seen that thing. looks neat. well neat idea at least

I have a Prusa,therefore I research.

Posted : 07/08/2018 7:01 am
Ben
 Ben
(@ben-4)
Trusted Member
Re: 45° Printing without supports

I just posted a question regarding this capability and had not seen this post. Oh well.

Could you not just tip the printer at 45 degrees and print a carefully oriented/plated part? i.e. put undercuts on the uphll side of the machine?

I feel like i am missing some key aspect of this. Can the printer just be inclined to achieve the result? Is it strictly gravity that is the problem?

Posted : 14/08/2018 8:08 pm
Share: