Its crazy how even large companies use these types of programs and the devs arent rich already. They really do deserve so much for making such an amazing tool for all of us
I looked at the other 3D slicers for FDM and Cura truly is best in class. Tree supports are revolutionary and enabled me to print all sorts of things on my Ender 3 Pros that I wouldn't have thought possible and only printed using my resin printer before.
Also based on random unverified Google searches Ultimaker has 300 employees and revenue of $67 million a year, so their devs are probably being compensated pretty well.
@Alac Hansen, we (I'm one of the Cura devs) are compensated regular wages for a software developer in the Netherlands. Which isn't exorbitant but fair compensation. But we are also all open-source fanboys who are makers and DIYers. It is not uncommon that we decide to make contributions to Cura (or other open-source projects) just because we care for that project, and we want to add specific functionality to make our own life better.
BTW, this new tree support wasn't made by an UltiMaker employee. Thomas Rahm is a community contributor who made this in his own time. So please check if he has a "buy me a coffee " link if you can spare something or show him some love in another way. Doesn't need to be much. It is often the thought that counts, th
This how I've always expected tree supports to work. I was severely disappointed in the old ones as I mostly wound up with objects permanently cocooned or breaking the model trying to free them. My best results have come from putting in my own supports in CAD before slicing. My own wind up being similar to the new method. This should save me a lot of time.
This is fantastic. I got into printing a couple of years ago thinking we were still in the 90s and this technology hadn't come down from thousands of dollars. $250 later and I'm printing. Because I came in when I did, I've only ever used tree supports. But this is a whole new level of control!
I've been using the old tree supports over regular supports for years without any major problems. Compared to regular supports they're always faster to print, but I'm glad they got improved.
Couldn't have released this video at a more ideal time for me. Thank you! Subscribed. Definitely appreciate the visuals as to what each settings does. I'm a visual learner so just reading the descriptions of each setting doesn't really do it for me. Looking forward to another video where you dive deeper.
Guy from one day in the future here! I’m born and raised on planet Prusa so this is the first I’ve heard of tree supports. They look amazing! I’m excited to hear you say they’ll be in prusa slicer eventually as well. Thanks for the video!
Prusaslicer is under AGPL, which means once they release the binaries for the software they have to release the source, so if by "private" you mean "under internal development" that's not the same. They also can't re-licence the whole thing, without asking the original devs of Slic3r to accept a new license.
Yes I wasn't implying they are in breach of licence, of course they are welcome to do whatever they want with their in development branch. I merely said it doesn't make sense to me or help me know what's coming up. I managed to get this video out two days later than the release because I was able to prepare a week or so in advance. Without that, it means a week plus before I can get anything done, takes a lot of work to make vids like this
Honestly this is one of the sole reasons why I have sworn by flashforge's slicer for years. They have had these "new" treelike supports for a long time. Now I can switch to cura and actually have more control over my settings.
@@Karavusk Simplify3D updated? I used that one for YEARS and really like the interface compared to Cura but they never added features! I finally made the break when I heavily modified my printer and it made sense. Still learning Cura but Simplify has fallen so far behind it’s not funny. A real shame too since it’s a commercial product and not terribly cheap either geez
@@BLKMGK4 Then I have "great" news for you. It is still 3 years behind and you would have to rebuy it since it is a paid update. By the way Prusaslicer might be slightly more familiar for you but both are great options.
Omg thanks for showing that I can resize support blockers. Should've been obvious but I din't realize that and was putting down a ton of them all squished together.
IceSL has had this style of supports forever and is an underappreciated and amazing slicer. It also has the most accurate slicing algorithm of any slicer I've used. Thanks for the video however, nice to see Cura getting better supports.
@@LostInTech3D Ended up doing just that. Printing a deer model with antlers, and it now seems to recommend far less support for the antlers, and a much shorter print time on the same profile I was using. Fingers crossed, if it works as intended, this could be a huge improvement! Update: It turned out great!
Just learned that support blockers can be scaled up and down :D I've been setting these in small cubes and struggling to cover the unwanted areas fully! LOL I'll be using this setting more from now on!
Thanks god that there is a new way of tree support, i used it the last days and it became so strong i could not remove it at all anymore. Hopefully this new version is the one we all really hoped for
I've always liked the tree supports and have been able to generally get them to a usable state with support blockers, but now, it looks solidly plug-and-play, making it a lot more user friendly!
Cura is FREE and works on most printers right out of the box. I'm a novice and "old" and thus appreciate Cura more than most without having to fine tuning too many settings.
@@hendrikjbboss9973 their slicer is also free. Sometimes it’s easier to use their slicer to cut and section parts than Cura. Branch out from Cura, lots of cool stuff and lots of learning.
I ended up rotating that frog until it didn't need any supports in its mouth when I printed it last year, tree supports like that look like a much more convenient way of printing it. I'm looking forward to the orange slicer version of this
As a big fan of tree supports who hated both the support blocking interplay and the incredibly difficult removal on some parts, this is amazing. I didn't even finish the video before I downloaded the alpha. Thank you.
That's actually amazing! I can't count the amount of times i had a pretty neat print, which had supports that were literally impossible to remove without some exotic tools. "It looked doable in the Cura preview though"
Thanks for this video! This is great! I had a model I printed multiple times with tree supports with delicate piece that no matter how careful I was, removing the supports broke the piece! This was because it was way too much support, and it looked very similar to the shrooms you showed. I'm pretty sure I shared it on the Discord server.
Good find, thank you for sharing. I'd played with the tree settings and support blockery stuff in Cura before and got the trees to some resemblance of sanity playing with the settings but this alpha seems to have some useful extras, I might just grab a copy. Thanks again!
PS: My biggest lesson that I learned-ed-ed a few months ago has been: 0.6mm nozzle, 1mm extrusion width, 2 walls, and 0.28mm layer heights. Way stronger. I tend to design working mechanical / workshop things with measurement multiples of 2mm anyway, and that means some stuff just prints up to twice as fast (and the rest around 30% faster) than defualt 0.6 draft mode. And stronger, did I mention stronger? A lot stronger? I've honestly been surprised, it felt like having the cake, AND the cake not being a lie, AND then getting to eat it as well... Now looking for another old Ender3 Pro to set up as a "fiddly bits" (and comparison testing) printer using smaller nozzles, but Brucely ain't going back. (Unless I really need some finer detail before I turn up another machine.)
Tree supports are cool. It will be nice to see them in Prusaslicer since I generally prefer that slicer because it starts faster and slices faster - probably a result of not using python for so much stuff.
Hehe the frontend is python, the back end is mostly c++ as far as I'm aware. I think the slow slicing may happen in prusa too when trees exist, as it seems to be the cause of the slowness in cura, but we will see
Straight up popped myself in the eye with the broken off pointy part of my Ender 3 filament cutters with the blue handles... while I was using it to cut off supports... luckily no serious or lasting damage. At least not to my eye.
As a fairly new printer I’ve stayed away from tree supports just because I make a big mess and haven’t dialed my settings in. But this gives me hope to give them another shot so thanks for sharing!
Early in my printing life I gave up on tree supports because they I thought they would be a good idea but instead completely ruined and buried a multi day print that I wished for before I even bought a printer. But this, this may be a seed of hope being planted. Nothing concrete but maybe.
I got your point of usefulness with the rectangular component example early in the video where the supports don't touch the bottom of the part, so this may be pedantic, but of course you would (almost) never print that part in the orientation shown. Flip it 45 degrees and it would require no support at all. As an aside, those must have been the cheapest pair of wire snips on the planet! Just about any pair of snips that didn't come free with a 3D printer will have zero issue with cutting anything you can print from here to eternity. You are certainly right that they're not the optimal tool for working directly with the support/part mating surface, but they're a good tool for other support snipping scenarios. I hope that didn't come off overly negative, but it tends to be in the details in manufacturing and fabrication that can take our potential from good to great, so just details such as consistent mention of orientation discipline may be helpful for those early in their journey. You're making good content and I look forward to seeing everything grow. Best to you and yours in the coming year.
I've been using UltiMaker-Cura-5.3.0-alpha+xmas for a few days now it is improved greatly. I experienced a minor "will not slice" error on a Santa model with Fuzzy Skin enabled and reported that bug. They (UltiMaker) responded immediately for a work-around (increase the model size by 5%) and are trying to identify the "root" cause (get it?). Much, much, much better than paying another $59 USD for the next (finally) release of Simplify3D (not worth the money - too little too late).
Haha I approve of the joke. The workaround is also to move the model slightly on the build plate, this bug is not new on this release believe it or not
@@emmanuelgoldstein3682 They arent meant for that application and arent built to sustain force from the wrong direction which people apply by wiggling them around a little while trying to cut support with it. So it kinda is expected to break...
This was a great video to see early on Boxing morning. What an upgrade! Cura has been the preferred slicer for my Cr10s but tree supports have been pretty terrible as you described in the video. Love the channel and thanks for sharing.
This is awesome. I always used tree supports for 3D prints of game characters with lots of msall and fragile details, normal supports were way too hard to remove. I had to spend like 30 minutes removing the capsule of a tree that formed around the entire character. Had to break it down bits by bits. I bet that with these new supports the entire process will be easier.
Conical supports setting also allows overreach, which I used in many cases where tree supports didn't work too well. Might not need to do that anymore 🙂 (although standard supports produce superior quality on any supported flat surfaces layed on top of them when used with support roof, so for these cases I might still prefer setting them conical instead of tree).
Dude... why is no one talking about this new version?? This is the first time in my life that I have joy removing the supports from my PETG prints, it's so damn easy to remove them right now.
My first ever 3D print, I printed a few, tiny goblin archers (2cm tall) which held their little bows with their tiny strings sideways and aimed forward (so floating). I assumed that removing the supports from those bows would be nightmare, but somehow, with the new tree supports, I pulled on the supports and they just, detached? like magic. and the thin ass bow was not damaged AT ALL. I was amazed.
ive used the 'old' tree infill before for a small trex skull, it just peals away (tearing the material at the layers) if you *turn off* infill for the support structure
if they add custom drawn supports it would solve all those issues. And would be really great to have more control over supports for FDM saving material and print time. I still have a couple of print with unremovable supports done in some test-prints.
Slice down the middle, print in 2 pieces and glue together.... rarely need supports. It's already a 3D print with lines so what is one more line going to hurt?? LOL. Love your vids....
what might be a nice handtool would be 3D printed custom blades for dremmel and oscillating dremels. there is welding rod with the harness of tool steel. just grind the blade down till you have it where you want it. if plastic trimming is the issue it shouldn't be difficult
Talking about those snips, please be careful with them. I had a pair break while doing something I wasnt supposed to do. My thumb was near the tips and the broken tip shot through the end of my thumb.
I'm from 13 hours in the future. Holy shit the world is crazy now! And yeah, thanks for the breakdown. The feature looks very polished now. I won't try it just yet, but the next time I need to print a support-heavy model, I'll remember this.
OMG, Why my older version Cura tree supports looks like the "new" one! I was flaming so hard Cura when I downloaded 5++ version. because the tree supports didn't look like tree anymore.... Turns out that by some reason before I was using the Thomas version. This video helps me a lot to find my good old (new) tree support!!!
I really missed the tree support that looks like tree! I remember now that I had problems reaching Ultimakers website at my old work and I had only access to github so I downloaded the Thomas version. Love you guys :)
So this is where Prusa's upcoming "organic" supports come from! I can see some people trying to use these new tree supports to create model trees. Design a sacrificial object that creates a template for trees and the keep the support. The 85 degree supports at 4:33 makes me think that arc overhangs might be better suited to tree supports than the actual print.
Prusaslicer is actually the most dbag slicer. They seriously have a closed source codebase while they lift code from Cura’s open source code? That’s crazy. Which wouldn’t be so bad if they didn’t try to sell it as their own. As a developer, I’ve only seen the weakest dev teams pull that garbage.
I have to wonder if the new Bambu Studio "slim tree" option is based on this, and if so to what degree. I think somewhere in the notes for the newest beta of their slicer they mentioned- "we learned the initial idea and code of tree support came from Cura a few months ago and we are grateful for that" They said a few months ago, which is before the release of the Cura beta of course, but they could very well be developing off the same source
I have a sitting dog stl file. On top of the branch would be his hanging ear. Unfortunately the tip of the branch is so fine it does not hold the entire ear until it reaches the head. How can I add MORE Branches? If I add diameter to the branch unfortunately it still comes to a point. I would like to drag the tip to a flatter piece almost looking like a paintbrush? Thanks
I can't wait for the new PS alpha. My current model which failed due to bad "experimental" MMU settings could massively benefit. I really struggled with traditional supports in some areas. It would certainly benefit. So I'm not going to reprint it until then. In the meantime I need to fix these settings so it doesn't fail next time. The color switching was failing in the extruder rather than the loading boden tube making it think it had filament when in fact it didn't.
I'm from the future. This version of tree supports are a massive improvement. But they're about to get a lot lot better in a coming update. But wait till you get anti gravity print beds and you no longer need supports! Sadly most of you reading in this time period won't live long enough to see them but know they're coming!
Unrelated, but this comment made me think of a printbed that would basically be like the surface of an airhockey table. The slicer would know the location of the air vents and build tree support on it such that air can flow through, also it would be a nozzle shape at the end to create pressure. The airflow can then be used to cure the plastic faster, reducing the need for support or even somewhat supporting the part with air. The airbed doesn't have to be on when the print starts and the pressure doesn't shouldn't be very high or you would need individual control over which holes emit air or make sure the plastic adheres strongly enough so that the print doesn't come off, when holes are being blocked by the print
I've seen other printers that use triangle style truss style units as support. They end up having a minimum of excess material and can be easily removed. Trusses tend to be vertical members extending from bottom to top in a straight beam and once removed they are stable enough in themselves to be used for modelling and dioramas as building infrastructures. No waste here. The tree support looks too material heavy and not easily removed. This leads to more expense with material that is waste product. In many production situations you don't want to remove this level of material or take an extra half an hour when you are cranking out 200 - 500 parts a day. Ther residual that must be cleaned up also costs time and material. The trusses leave one or two little squares to be removed and sanded. The tree supports offer little value and have an excessive cost in a production environment. There is also the question of the amount of support required to form as an engineering question. Some weight and deflection analysis should answer that question effectively.
I was using these exact cutters to flush cut a piece of wire the other day and the tip snapped off just as shown in the video. The piece literally hit less than one inch below my eye and went all the way to the bone below my right eyeball.
I had one of those cutters snap on me and yes the end hit me in the eye! Fortunately it missed my actual eye and just hit my lower eyelid but dayum it hurt and that was close to me losing an eye!
Does anyone here know how doe I dispose of water washable resin after it was washed off the prints and is now filling up my water tub on the washing unit? How do I in the cold wet no sun winter time UK dispose of this resin in the water it is in? Sadly no strong sun shine around us in the UK now our wet windy cold over clouded winter time is here! So how do I get the resin waste in the water set and removed from the washing tub. All advice be helpful. Happy New Year all hopefully 2023 be a better time for all us?
Its crazy how even large companies use these types of programs and the devs arent rich already. They really do deserve so much for making such an amazing tool for all of us
I looked at the other 3D slicers for FDM and Cura truly is best in class. Tree supports are revolutionary and enabled me to print all sorts of things on my Ender 3 Pros that I wouldn't have thought possible and only printed using my resin printer before.
Also based on random unverified Google searches Ultimaker has 300 employees and revenue of $67 million a year, so their devs are probably being compensated pretty well.
@@AlecMHansen idk other than tree supports i really dislike cura. It's just awfull to use
@Alac Hansen, we (I'm one of the Cura devs) are compensated regular wages for a software developer in the Netherlands. Which isn't exorbitant but fair compensation.
But we are also all open-source fanboys who are makers and DIYers. It is not uncommon that we decide to make contributions to Cura (or other open-source projects) just because we care for that project, and we want to add specific functionality to make our own life better.
BTW, this new tree support wasn't made by an UltiMaker employee. Thomas Rahm is a community contributor who made this in his own time. So please check if he has a "buy me a coffee " link if you can spare something or show him some love in another way.
Doesn't need to be much. It is often the thought that counts, th
Support blockers finally working as you would expect might be my favorite part of this.
Now if the add a support add on would actually, you know, SUPPORT THE FRICKIN MODEL?? that'd be great!
Wait, I've never had any issue with support blockers. Always used them. What was the issue?
@@fns58 whenever i personally used them they always would make supports even though my blocks were there
@@masterlukegaming9292 same
I have been using a Cura Tree Support 2 for about 2 months now which is more or less what you have there, the time saving over Cura 5.1 is enormous.
Yeah Thomas let me know about it around 9 months ago, but I am the king of procrastination 😒
You mean I can get these in cura 4.whatever?
@@billallen6109 No
@@billallen6109 I've had them in my cura 4 since I started using my 3d printer a year ago
@@juryrigged1654 Not Tree Support V2
They've grown so well and look mature now... looking through the comments, others agree.
Big thanks to Thomas for tending that garden for years!
Haha Cura beat PS to the release, very nice. I've never liked the old style tree supports but keen to give this a go!
Definitely give them a go! 😁👍
They always seem to beat them.
I'll wait for Prusaslicer. :) I just like it better overall. Bambulab's version of PS is even better imo!
John (above)mentioned ARC overhangs in combo will be a game changer i feel the same Merry Christmas Angus and to you an yours!
Merry XMAS! 🎄🎄🎄
This how I've always expected tree supports to work. I was severely disappointed in the old ones as I mostly wound up with objects permanently cocooned or breaking the model trying to free them.
My best results have come from putting in my own supports in CAD before slicing. My own wind up being similar to the new method. This should save me a lot of time.
Oh nice! I like tree supports in most cases since they save on print time and material, but I'm definitely excited for an improved version.
This is fantastic. I got into printing a couple of years ago thinking we were still in the 90s and this technology hadn't come down from thousands of dollars. $250 later and I'm printing. Because I came in when I did, I've only ever used tree supports. But this is a whole new level of control!
I know, I wish I'd got into it a couple years earlier too, somehow it went from £2k for a makerbot to £200 for an ender and I hadn't noticed
I've been using the old tree supports over regular supports for years without any major problems. Compared to regular supports they're always faster to print, but I'm glad they got improved.
Couldn't have released this video at a more ideal time for me. Thank you! Subscribed. Definitely appreciate the visuals as to what each settings does. I'm a visual learner so just reading the descriptions of each setting doesn't really do it for me. Looking forward to another video where you dive deeper.
Guy from one day in the future here! I’m born and raised on planet Prusa so this is the first I’ve heard of tree supports. They look amazing! I’m excited to hear you say they’ll be in prusa slicer eventually as well. Thanks for the video!
Prusaslicer is under AGPL, which means once they release the binaries for the software they have to release the source, so if by "private" you mean "under internal development" that's not the same. They also can't re-licence the whole thing, without asking the original devs of Slic3r to accept a new license.
Yes I wasn't implying they are in breach of licence, of course they are welcome to do whatever they want with their in development branch. I merely said it doesn't make sense to me or help me know what's coming up.
I managed to get this video out two days later than the release because I was able to prepare a week or so in advance. Without that, it means a week plus before I can get anything done, takes a lot of work to make vids like this
I love tree supports since their release and I am so hyped for the better version! It was a really nice christmas gift from them!
i love how tree suports can be easyer to remove -also free christmas tree with every print when used lol
Honestly this is one of the sole reasons why I have sworn by flashforge's slicer for years. They have had these "new" treelike supports for a long time. Now I can switch to cura and actually have more control over my settings.
Looks great. Can't wait for Prusa Slicer 2.6 and their Organic supports.
Gotta get onto these treees, very big thanks to Thomas ❤️
We just started with 3D printing a few days ago and this comes like a christmas gift. Thanks for the video, i could have missed it otherwise.
Just when prusa slicer was starting to grab my attention, cura goes and tries to one up them 🤣
It's good to see the same features in both slicers I think, they are both way ahead of any of the competition so I guess it works out!
@@LostInTech3D and then we have the new S3D release with new features that were standard in 2019 and none of the newer stuff
The same developer made the tree supports for both programs, they are the same!
@@Karavusk Simplify3D updated? I used that one for YEARS and really like the interface compared to Cura but they never added features! I finally made the break when I heavily modified my printer and it made sense. Still learning Cura but Simplify has fallen so far behind it’s not funny. A real shame too since it’s a commercial product and not terribly cheap either geez
@@BLKMGK4 Then I have "great" news for you. It is still 3 years behind and you would have to rebuy it since it is a paid update.
By the way Prusaslicer might be slightly more familiar for you but both are great options.
As a resin printer, glad fdm printers have been able to get these as well.
Omg thanks for showing that I can resize support blockers. Should've been obvious but I din't realize that and was putting down a ton of them all squished together.
it's really not that obvious tbh!
IceSL has had this style of supports forever and is an underappreciated and amazing slicer. It also has the most accurate slicing algorithm of any slicer I've used.
Thanks for the video however, nice to see Cura getting better supports.
Thank you! I am printing noob and didn't even know Cura did tree supports. You will save me so much filament and clean up.
Amazing. I do a lot of very organic shape printing that needs lots of support and this will be a BIG game changer
I find crushing supports with needle nosed pliers first makes them come off easier
Started a print with tree supports 20min ago. Oh well, I'll try this next time. Thanks for the video and have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Haha, stop it, start it again! 😅 Thank you! :)
@@LostInTech3D Ended up doing just that. Printing a deer model with antlers, and it now seems to recommend far less support for the antlers, and a much shorter print time on the same profile I was using. Fingers crossed, if it works as intended, this could be a huge improvement!
Update: It turned out great!
Wow! I mostly design functional prints that don't need supports but this is amazing!
Honestly, the one thing id love to see is the Lychee style "support islands/floating starts only" option (and project compatibility cross slicers).
A big Merry Xmas to everyone from the Lost In Tech Community! 🎄🎄
Just learned that support blockers can be scaled up and down :D I've been setting these in small cubes and struggling to cover the unwanted areas fully! LOL I'll be using this setting more from now on!
Thanks god that there is a new way of tree support, i used it the last days and it became so strong i could not remove it at all anymore. Hopefully this new version is the one we all really hoped for
Adjusting flow on the old style of supports is how I got away from that problem you were describing early on.
This is awesome. Thank you for covering this almost instantly. Merry Christmas🎄
I've always liked the tree supports and have been able to generally get them to a usable state with support blockers, but now, it looks solidly plug-and-play, making it a lot more user friendly!
I've been working with tree supports in FlashPrint for about 10 years and I really missed it in Cura. Very happy that it finally becomes available!
The proprietary slicer for the Flash Forge printers has the best tree supports I’ve ever used. Seems like Cura is finally catching up!
Cura is FREE and works on most printers right out of the box. I'm a novice and "old" and thus appreciate Cura more than most without having to fine tuning too many settings.
@@hendrikjbboss9973 their slicer is also free. Sometimes it’s easier to use their slicer to cut and section parts than Cura. Branch out from Cura, lots of cool stuff and lots of learning.
I ended up rotating that frog until it didn't need any supports in its mouth when I printed it last year, tree supports like that look like a much more convenient way of printing it. I'm looking forward to the orange slicer version of this
As a big fan of tree supports who hated both the support blocking interplay and the incredibly difficult removal on some parts, this is amazing. I didn't even finish the video before I downloaded the alpha. Thank you.
That's actually amazing!
I can't count the amount of times i had a pretty neat print, which had supports that were literally impossible to remove without some exotic tools. "It looked doable in the Cura preview though"
Thanks for this video! This is great! I had a model I printed multiple times with tree supports with delicate piece that no matter how careful I was, removing the supports broke the piece! This was because it was way too much support, and it looked very similar to the shrooms you showed. I'm pretty sure I shared it on the Discord server.
Wow, this looks amazing. Can't wait to see what kind of projects I can make for my channel eventually. Thanks for this great video!
Bambu Studio's tree supports seems to resemble the new style already. Either way, catch up Prusaslicer!
Never had a snipped do that oh god
Yeah, no way that should happen when clipping plastic
Thank you for the info! I’m new to resin printing and I have been learning about supports
Good find, thank you for sharing. I'd played with the tree settings and support blockery stuff in Cura before and got the trees to some resemblance of sanity playing with the settings but this alpha seems to have some useful extras, I might just grab a copy. Thanks again!
PS: My biggest lesson that I learned-ed-ed a few months ago has been: 0.6mm nozzle, 1mm extrusion width, 2 walls, and 0.28mm layer heights. Way stronger. I tend to design working mechanical / workshop things with measurement multiples of 2mm anyway, and that means some stuff just prints up to twice as fast (and the rest around 30% faster) than defualt 0.6 draft mode. And stronger, did I mention stronger? A lot stronger?
I've honestly been surprised, it felt like having the cake, AND the cake not being a lie, AND then getting to eat it as well... Now looking for another old Ender3 Pro to set up as a "fiddly bits" (and comparison testing) printer using smaller nozzles, but Brucely ain't going back. (Unless I really need some finer detail before I turn up another machine.)
Great video thanks, and merry Christmas to all.
thank you, you too
Tree supports are cool. It will be nice to see them in Prusaslicer since I generally prefer that slicer because it starts faster and slices faster - probably a result of not using python for so much stuff.
Hehe the frontend is python, the back end is mostly c++ as far as I'm aware. I think the slow slicing may happen in prusa too when trees exist, as it seems to be the cause of the slowness in cura, but we will see
Urgh just printed a 3 day print that would have gone soooo much better with these new tree supports!!
Thanks so much for highlighting
Straight up popped myself in the eye with the broken off pointy part of my Ender 3 filament cutters with the blue handles... while I was using it to cut off supports... luckily no serious or lasting damage. At least not to my eye.
As a fairly new printer I’ve stayed away from tree supports just because I make a big mess and haven’t dialed my settings in. But this gives me hope to give them another shot so thanks for sharing!
Early in my printing life I gave up on tree supports because they I thought they would be a good idea but instead completely ruined and buried a multi day print that I wished for before I even bought a printer. But this, this may be a seed of hope being planted. Nothing concrete but maybe.
I got your point of usefulness with the rectangular component example early in the video where the supports don't touch the bottom of the part, so this may be pedantic, but of course you would (almost) never print that part in the orientation shown. Flip it 45 degrees and it would require no support at all. As an aside, those must have been the cheapest pair of wire snips on the planet! Just about any pair of snips that didn't come free with a 3D printer will have zero issue with cutting anything you can print from here to eternity. You are certainly right that they're not the optimal tool for working directly with the support/part mating surface, but they're a good tool for other support snipping scenarios.
I hope that didn't come off overly negative, but it tends to be in the details in manufacturing and fabrication that can take our potential from good to great, so just details such as consistent mention of orientation discipline may be helpful for those early in their journey. You're making good content and I look forward to seeing everything grow. Best to you and yours in the coming year.
Love this. Nothing better than a program behaving how you intuitively think it should.
I've been using UltiMaker-Cura-5.3.0-alpha+xmas for a few days now it is improved greatly. I experienced a minor "will not slice" error on a Santa model with Fuzzy Skin enabled and reported that bug. They (UltiMaker) responded immediately for a work-around (increase the model size by 5%) and are trying to identify the "root" cause (get it?). Much, much, much better than paying another $59 USD for the next (finally) release of Simplify3D (not worth the money - too little too late).
Haha I approve of the joke. The workaround is also to move the model slightly on the build plate, this bug is not new on this release believe it or not
If you break those clippers on plastic, you had a defective tool. That's insane.
I've seen several accounts of this
@@LostInTech3D They have a high rate of failure then? It should be expected to not break.
I’ve had a pair snap in exactly that place!
@@emmanuelgoldstein3682 They arent meant for that application and arent built to sustain force from the wrong direction which people apply by wiggling them around a little while trying to cut support with it.
So it kinda is expected to break...
@@GamesPlayer1337 What is the application they are meant for?
This was a great video to see early on Boxing morning. What an upgrade! Cura has been the preferred slicer for my Cr10s but tree supports have been pretty terrible as you described in the video. Love the channel and thanks for sharing.
This is awesome. I always used tree supports for 3D prints of game characters with lots of msall and fragile details, normal supports were way too hard to remove. I had to spend like 30 minutes removing the capsule of a tree that formed around the entire character. Had to break it down bits by bits. I bet that with these new supports the entire process will be easier.
Conical supports setting also allows overreach, which I used in many cases where tree supports didn't work too well. Might not need to do that anymore 🙂
(although standard supports produce superior quality on any supported flat surfaces layed on top of them when used with support roof, so for these cases I might still prefer setting them conical instead of tree).
Good information, as I am going to get a 3-d printer soon and doing research at the moment
Dude... why is no one talking about this new version?? This is the first time in my life that I have joy removing the supports from my PETG prints, it's so damn easy to remove them right now.
Good question. I don't know! People are strange.
A "mushroom" huh ? Suure buddy ....we all get looonelyyy sometiimes xD
9:15 such a perfect application for what i NEED
finally.. i hope they keep working at this.. many of my prints ruined trying to remove supports which fused..
My first ever 3D print, I printed a few, tiny goblin archers (2cm tall) which held their little bows with their tiny strings sideways and aimed forward (so floating). I assumed that removing the supports from those bows would be nightmare, but somehow, with the new tree supports, I pulled on the supports and they just, detached? like magic. and the thin ass bow was not damaged AT ALL. I was amazed.
thats quite good going, I've been meaning to do a vid on printing models/small stuff for a while but it is _such a pain_ to get supports to work.
Phenomenal! This is going to save me so much print time and material, the new tree supports that is.
This adds some much needed fine tuning!
ive used the 'old' tree infill before for a small trex skull, it just peals away (tearing the material at the layers) if you *turn off* infill for the support structure
if they add custom drawn supports it would solve all those issues. And would be really great to have more control over supports for FDM saving material and print time.
I still have a couple of print with unremovable supports done in some test-prints.
Those mushrooms look filthy with those old style supports...
Tree supports combined with arc overhangs would be very useful.
Slice down the middle, print in 2 pieces and glue together.... rarely need supports. It's already a 3D print with lines so what is one more line going to hurt?? LOL. Love your vids....
what might be a nice handtool would be 3D printed custom blades for dremmel and oscillating dremels. there is welding rod with the harness of tool steel. just grind the blade down till you have it where you want it. if plastic trimming is the issue it shouldn't be difficult
Hey nice Christmas pressie!
The tree supports have saved me SOOOOO much filament
Talking about those snips, please be careful with them. I had a pair break while doing something I wasnt supposed to do. My thumb was near the tips and the broken tip shot through the end of my thumb.
I wish I saw this 4 hours ago, it would’ve saved me a lot of time lol, guess I’ll have to finish my current print
I'm from 13 hours in the future. Holy shit the world is crazy now!
And yeah, thanks for the breakdown. The feature looks very polished now. I won't try it just yet, but the next time I need to print a support-heavy model, I'll remember this.
OMG, Why my older version Cura tree supports looks like the "new" one!
I was flaming so hard Cura when I downloaded 5++ version. because the tree supports didn't look like tree anymore....
Turns out that by some reason before I was using the Thomas version. This video helps me a lot to find my good old (new) tree support!!!
I really missed the tree support that looks like tree! I remember now that I had problems reaching Ultimakers website at my old work and I had only access to github so I downloaded the Thomas version. Love you guys :)
Finally. I had so many issues with way too much tree support.
So this is where Prusa's upcoming "organic" supports come from!
I can see some people trying to use these new tree supports to create model trees. Design a sacrificial object that creates a template for trees and the keep the support.
The 85 degree supports at 4:33 makes me think that arc overhangs might be better suited to tree supports than the actual print.
"Tree leaves.stl" and print it in the air, bingo! You can even simulate Fall.
Prusaslicer is actually the most dbag slicer. They seriously have a closed source codebase while they lift code from Cura’s open source code? That’s crazy. Which wouldn’t be so bad if they didn’t try to sell it as their own. As a developer, I’ve only seen the weakest dev teams pull that garbage.
@@NicodemusT how is PrusaSlicer closed source?
It's not closed source.
@@LostInTech3D you literally said their codebase was private in the video though…
I have to wonder if the new Bambu Studio "slim tree" option is based on this, and if so to what degree. I think somewhere in the notes for the newest beta of their slicer they mentioned-
"we learned the initial idea and code of tree support came from Cura a few months ago and we are grateful for that"
They said a few months ago, which is before the release of the Cura beta of course, but they could very well be developing off the same source
as far as I saw in their code base, they based it from our (Cura) old tree support
Flashprint has had good tree supports forever.
Yeah, I found out the hard way about those clippers. Thought they were great up until the point where it became a dangerous projectile.
I have a sitting dog stl file. On top of the branch would be his hanging ear. Unfortunately the tip of the branch is so fine it does not hold the entire ear until it reaches the head. How can I add MORE Branches? If I add diameter to the branch unfortunately it still comes to a point. I would like to drag the tip to a flatter piece almost looking like a paintbrush? Thanks
"What do you think of THIS"
I can't wait for the new PS alpha. My current model which failed due to bad "experimental" MMU settings could massively benefit. I really struggled with traditional supports in some areas. It would certainly benefit. So I'm not going to reprint it until then. In the meantime I need to fix these settings so it doesn't fail next time. The color switching was failing in the extruder rather than the loading boden tube making it think it had filament when in fact it didn't.
I'm from the future. This version of tree supports are a massive improvement. But they're about to get a lot lot better in a coming update. But wait till you get anti gravity print beds and you no longer need supports! Sadly most of you reading in this time period won't live long enough to see them but know they're coming!
Unrelated, but this comment made me think of a printbed that would basically be like the surface of an airhockey table. The slicer would know the location of the air vents and build tree support on it such that air can flow through, also it would be a nozzle shape at the end to create pressure. The airflow can then be used to cure the plastic faster, reducing the need for support or even somewhat supporting the part with air.
The airbed doesn't have to be on when the print starts and the pressure doesn't shouldn't be very high or you would need individual control over which holes emit air or make sure the plastic adheres strongly enough so that the print doesn't come off, when holes are being blocked by the print
You think gravity has any role in FDM printing? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA Ha.
There's already industrial 6axis machines which are basically already this.
If you get higher quality flush cutters they won't snap. I have a set of Crescent hand tools and they work very well even on rough projects.
Thanks for sharing this feature!
Combine this with Lightning Infill and Arc Overhangs
Big fan of the Christmas tree supports. I have been using 5.3 alpha for awhile. Hoping 5.5 still uses these supports.
yep they have been in main cura for a few months now, you are safe to update!
@@LostInTech3D cool, thanks!
Now I can print the "impossible" dragon! 😂😂😂
I've seen other printers that use triangle style truss style units as support. They end up having a minimum of excess material and can be easily removed. Trusses tend to be vertical members extending from bottom to top in a straight beam and once removed they are stable enough in themselves to be used for modelling and dioramas as building infrastructures. No waste here. The tree support looks too material heavy and not easily removed. This leads to more expense with material that is waste product. In many production situations you don't want to remove this level of material or take an extra half an hour when you are cranking out 200 - 500 parts a day. Ther residual that must be cleaned up also costs time and material. The trusses leave one or two little squares to be removed and sanded. The tree supports offer little value and have an excessive cost in a production environment. There is also the question of the amount of support required to form as an engineering question. Some weight and deflection analysis should answer that question effectively.
Sounds interesting but it's better with pictures :)
I was using these exact cutters to flush cut a piece of wire the other day and the tip snapped off just as shown in the video. The piece literally hit less than one inch below my eye and went all the way to the bone below my right eyeball.
YIKES.
I had one of those cutters snap on me and yes the end hit me in the eye! Fortunately it missed my actual eye and just hit my lower eyelid but dayum it hurt and that was close to me losing an eye!
Lucky!!! But yeah thanks for sharing, people never believe me
I love this!
Hello from 2 days in the future
Freaking cool!!
Does anyone here know how doe I dispose of water washable resin after it was washed off the prints and is now filling up my water tub on the washing unit?
How do I in the cold wet no sun winter time UK dispose of this resin in the water it is in?
Sadly no strong sun shine around us in the UK now our wet windy cold over clouded winter time is here! So how do I get the resin waste in the water set and removed from the washing tub.
All advice be helpful. Happy New Year all hopefully 2023 be a better time for all us?
I didn't know I have the option of resizing the blockers, thanks. Maybe the next iteration will have a round column blocker available?
Round ones? 😁 Whatever next, people will want spheres and polygons! Hehehe
We need this in Prusa!
You're getting it in prusa!
@@LostInTech3D Can't wait.