@Simon fischer all printer and printed parts need to be food safe: brass nozzles contain toxic lead, filament, extruder etc. Plus the pletoras of tiny reservoirs for the bacteria in the FDM print.
The process is also showed in a few of their other videos. The process is occurring behind where the bottle is cut and is also shown rolled on the gear-looking thing during this video
I feel that artisan lampshades would be a great high-end luxury market for you to design and print. Particularly considering the nature of your process and the material's origin as a waste product (empty bottles). I think that there are a lot of rich people who would pay thousands of dollars for an artisanal lampshade that makes them feel more sustainable while also being a work of art.
Yesterday I've seen a video by Slant3D about the largest 3D printer farms (one is theirs) and one was of a US company solely selling 3D printed lamp shades. They print, sand and paint these shades. Seems to be a lot of margin in the making of this high sales price product.
at one point in my life my lightbulb on its own was so annoying to look at, it was too blinding, so i straight up just used a laundry detergent bottle to diffuse it.
The biggest discount about T3 from today, the price reduced from 199$ to 149$ or 139€ www.sunlu.com/products/terminator-3-fast-printing-fdm-3d-printer-up-to-250mm-s-32bit?variant=40058198032470
No joke, the cost of filament is the primary reason I never got a 3d printer, this is exactly the kind of thing that would finally convince me to get one. Is there a place to buy that cutting setup? And do you need a special 3d printer to print with that plastic? Finally, is it tolerant of many types of plastic from various bottles? Would it take milk cartons, etc? How flexible is this system? Looks really cool!
PLA pellets are cheap, it's a bummer that it is so expensive in filaments. Still, with 1kg reel you can print a lot of stuff and make it worth it easily
You can't be serious. The average price for filament is $20 for a kilogram roll. Do you have any idea how long that last? A very, very long time. Most things you print should be at 15% infill. I started printing 7 months ago and have 13 different colored rolls and I still haven't emptied any of the rolls yet. In other words, you can buy this printer from the video(Ender 3) and just one roll and print for a long time for just $100+$20. Anybody can afford that. I usually buy one or 2 filaments a month. Don't deny yourself. It's not as expensive as you think and you won't regret it. Best purchase I ever made. This little machine doesn't cease to amaze me still with all it can do.
Are programs/patterns to print out neat things like this, available as freeware on the internet? Otherwise how long does it take to manually train the printer to deposit in a specific pattern?
The only unfortunate thing I see is that.. Pet bottles are a closed system in terms of recycling /they can be recycled as new bottles almost infinitely. That's why when companies sell clothes made out of recycled bottles, they're taking plastic out of a closed system and turning it into an object that's hard to recycle... With that said, 3d printing technology definitely looks cool! Exploring options is always interesting.
@@Cullyxe not sure where you got the idea that PET can be recycled infinitely. As with any petroplastic, the polymers breakdown, UV exposure, usage and recycling are all detrimental to the polymers. The reality is that, depending on the method used, PET can only be recycled a maximum of 10 times. And as of currently, most recycling plants use methods that can only recycle them 2-3 times, and often they are downcycled into non-recyclable products, like textiles in their 2nd lifecycle. The other methods that can increase the amount of times petroplastic can be recycled require much more energy input and thus are also less viable economically. Furthermore, most often they petroplastic is not recycled, in the US the percentage of recycleable plastic actually getting recycled it's around a measly 20%. You're right about petroplastics being recycled into textiles. Recycled plastic textiles getting recycled again is not only highly unlikely, there are not good methods for it in the first place, so it's pretty much a dead end. This is a major issue with recycled petroplastic in general. Not only does it mislead consumers into a feel good consumption trap. It also stagnates the development and scalability of bioplastics and other more environmentally friendly alternatives for products. Which is a good part of the reason why we are in the crisis that we are now. Regulatory bodies have little to no incentive to push companies towards switching to bioplastics, let alone facilitating natural capitalist incentives. Petroleum companies around the world have a stranglehold on governments. And since consumers also are not informed, and very often misinformed, they also are not creating any real pressure on companies to switch over. In fact, it is clear that consumers are not at all educated whatsoever by day to day language. The definition of plastic is for a materials of properties, being lightweight, moldable, durable and flexible. It does not have anything to do with source. And yet the high majority of people only know plastic as petroplastic, they do not even any understanding that plastic can be made from other sources such as algae, plant material etc.. Sad state of affairs indeed.
Right, spending that much time turning trash into trash that looks different lmfao. It doesn’t look good, hardly saves any money and is a massive waste of time. The only thing worse is paying for filament to make plastic trash to put around your house
This is not a solution, it is only a stop gap. Recycling petroplastic only works a few times and then it's not able to be recycled anymore. The amount of embodied energy to make a petroplastic bottle is ridiculous and only feeds the petroleum companies bank accounts. It is very shortsighted of us as humans to be doing what we are doing with petroplastics right now. We need more sustainable solutions on the market, like bioplastics. Especially for disposable products like water bottles of all things. Why people don't just carry a water bottle with them and refill it as needed is just dumb consumer convenience and is seriously screwing up the world for future generations.
Una consulta ✋ Hay alguna alguna forma de unir los filamentos de diferentes botellas? O te quedan rollos de filamentos separados? Porque mi hermano se compró una impresora anteayer y estamos viendo el tema del reciclado de filamentos. Te preguntaba más que nada para no tener que tener 300 rollos pequeños de filamentos
Nice improvement, i am sure there are even more things you can design and do, like the table stoppers that prevent scratching on the wall, or door stoppers. Artisanally wise, lamps are hot, so i would probably stick to things on the table, but hey!! shout out on you for trying, afterall we are going towards the LED lamps stage.
The future is going to be every single household having a multi-material 3D printer and printing whatever they want, of course they're not gonna be able to print something as complex as a phone but it'll still be very useful
The truth is working,but you basically didn't melt.the plastic just deform it. When you pull over the 1.7mm hole then the plastic strip deform a circular wire. Is means the "filament" will be hollow. You have to change the extrusion, then good to go.
Imagine cutting a bottle for filament and then printing a bottle out of it
That's ebay i thought was happening too
bottle inception
It would not be food safe tho...
@Simon fischer I think it because how the fdm printer form the printed material which can cause bacteria to get in. CMIIW
@Simon fischer all printer and printed parts need to be food safe: brass nozzles contain toxic lead, filament, extruder etc. Plus the pletoras of tiny reservoirs for the bacteria in the FDM print.
Did I miss the part where the bottle plastic becomes filament?
You can only see it for a second next to the caliper - he's rolling the strips from the bottle into a tube to be used as filament. 0:18
@@dillis2188 wow, good catch
@@mdoerkse 😅8ou0k
The process is also showed in a few of their other videos. The process is occurring behind where the bottle is cut and is also shown rolled on the gear-looking thing during this video
Looks like he’s running it through like a baby induction heater or sum
I never expected to hear this song in a 3d printing video
It's a welcomed one tho ☺️
Juanes
Why not? Spanish speakers 3D print also….
It's no longer under copyright. No royalty fees 😂
Literally same. Love Juanes
La Camisa Negra, my favorite song from Spanish class.
It's so good
Yerbatero is another good song from him
What's Your native language?
Pumped up kicks, mi canción favorita de la clase de inglés.
@@you_dumb_for_replyinggay
I feel that artisan lampshades would be a great high-end luxury market for you to design and print. Particularly considering the nature of your process and the material's origin as a waste product (empty bottles). I think that there are a lot of rich people who would pay thousands of dollars for an artisanal lampshade that makes them feel more sustainable while also being a work of art.
Totally agree
Best i can do is 10
True
Yesterday I've seen a video by Slant3D about the largest 3D printer farms (one is theirs) and one was of a US company solely selling 3D printed lamp shades. They print, sand and paint these shades. Seems to be a lot of margin in the making of this high sales price product.
Definitely
That guitar song really brought back memories 😂🔥
Camisa Negra is a good one
The bottle being cut sounded like a jet engine starting up, a very quiet one, but still a jet engine
It was a ps4
at one point in my life my lightbulb on its own was so annoying to look at, it was too blinding, so i straight up just used a laundry detergent bottle to diffuse it.
I’ve used a plain pieces of white paper, it worked surprisingly good.
The biggest discount about T3 from today, the price reduced from 199$ to 149$ or 139€ www.sunlu.com/products/terminator-3-fast-printing-fdm-3d-printer-up-to-250mm-s-32bit?variant=40058198032470
Make qa trashcan using trash
Link funktuniert nicht 404 error
@@nasuhturk4780 aktualisierter Link
@@function3D 🙏danke
Temazoooo
Latinos understand
La Camisa Negra
Super buena cancion
No joke, the cost of filament is the primary reason I never got a 3d printer, this is exactly the kind of thing that would finally convince me to get one.
Is there a place to buy that cutting setup? And do you need a special 3d printer to print with that plastic?
Finally, is it tolerant of many types of plastic from various bottles? Would it take milk cartons, etc? How flexible is this system?
Looks really cool!
PLA pellets are cheap, it's a bummer that it is so expensive in filaments. Still, with 1kg reel you can print a lot of stuff and make it worth it easily
You can't be serious. The average price for filament is $20 for a kilogram roll. Do you have any idea how long that last? A very, very long time. Most things you print should be at 15% infill. I started printing 7 months ago and have 13 different colored rolls and I still haven't emptied any of the rolls yet.
In other words, you can buy this printer from the video(Ender 3) and just one roll and print for a long time for just $100+$20. Anybody can afford that. I usually buy one or 2 filaments a month. Don't deny yourself. It's not as expensive as you think and you won't regret it. Best purchase I ever made. This little machine doesn't cease to amaze me still with all it can do.
Are programs/patterns to print out neat things like this, available as freeware on the internet? Otherwise how long does it take to manually train the printer to deposit in a specific pattern?
@@steves2694there's loads of info. about 3D printing on you tube
Eres mi ídolo. Qué crack!!
3D printing a device that can make filament out of a Bottle.. A Genius!!!
The only unfortunate thing I see is that.. Pet bottles are a closed system in terms of recycling /they can be recycled as new bottles almost infinitely. That's why when companies sell clothes made out of recycled bottles, they're taking plastic out of a closed system and turning it into an object that's hard to recycle...
With that said, 3d printing technology definitely looks cool! Exploring options is always interesting.
@@Cullyxe not sure where you got the idea that PET can be recycled infinitely. As with any petroplastic, the polymers breakdown, UV exposure, usage and recycling are all detrimental to the polymers. The reality is that, depending on the method used, PET can only be recycled a maximum of 10 times. And as of currently, most recycling plants use methods that can only recycle them 2-3 times, and often they are downcycled into non-recyclable products, like textiles in their 2nd lifecycle. The other methods that can increase the amount of times petroplastic can be recycled require much more energy input and thus are also less viable economically. Furthermore, most often they petroplastic is not recycled, in the US the percentage of recycleable plastic actually getting recycled it's around a measly 20%.
You're right about petroplastics being recycled into textiles. Recycled plastic textiles getting recycled again is not only highly unlikely, there are not good methods for it in the first place, so it's pretty much a dead end.
This is a major issue with recycled petroplastic in general. Not only does it mislead consumers into a feel good consumption trap. It also stagnates the development and scalability of bioplastics and other more environmentally friendly alternatives for products. Which is a good part of the reason why we are in the crisis that we are now. Regulatory bodies have little to no incentive to push companies towards switching to bioplastics, let alone facilitating natural capitalist incentives. Petroleum companies around the world have a stranglehold on governments. And since consumers also are not informed, and very often misinformed, they also are not creating any real pressure on companies to switch over. In fact, it is clear that consumers are not at all educated whatsoever by day to day language. The definition of plastic is for a materials of properties, being lightweight, moldable, durable and flexible. It does not have anything to do with source. And yet the high majority of people only know plastic as petroplastic, they do not even any understanding that plastic can be made from other sources such as algae, plant material etc.. Sad state of affairs indeed.
Love the use of _Camisa Negra_ .
That's a gorgeous model! Thanks for linking it!!! Nice work, great vid.
I can imagine spending hour's doing this project to save $20 buying a lamp at the lamp store, and then my wife nagging me to take it down
Exactly that happened and I even used blue noctilucent filament!
Tell you'll take it down if she makes a better one
Crappy wife crappy life.
Right, spending that much time turning trash into trash that looks different lmfao. It doesn’t look good, hardly saves any money and is a massive waste of time. The only thing worse is paying for filament to make plastic trash to put around your house
@@itsv1p3rI bet your hobbies are entirely worthwhile and provide you with great cost savings.
I'm sorry, I wasn't expecting 'La camisa negra' to be playing on the background XDD
amazing! is there an STL file available for this lamp model???
first link in description
Plot twist: Use plastic string from bottle to print a bottle.
The print of sissyphus
Amazing, that looks lux xD
We all need this to (probably) solve plastic bottle problems
Unless the filament requirement isn't too complicated
This is not a solution, it is only a stop gap. Recycling petroplastic only works a few times and then it's not able to be recycled anymore. The amount of embodied energy to make a petroplastic bottle is ridiculous and only feeds the petroleum companies bank accounts. It is very shortsighted of us as humans to be doing what we are doing with petroplastics right now. We need more sustainable solutions on the market, like bioplastics. Especially for disposable products like water bottles of all things. Why people don't just carry a water bottle with them and refill it as needed is just dumb consumer convenience and is seriously screwing up the world for future generations.
Great dust collector!
as any lampe xD
*Inserts incandescent bulb*
Fire inspector: "ya, it's pretty obvious the fire started from this room"
led buld, no heat, there have never been any fire inspectors in my home
Wow! I love your work, amazing recycle plastic from bottle.
Me encantaría saber cómo diseñaste el jarrón, con arcilla podría quedar super bien algo así, si te animas a explicarlo etiquetame o algo ❤❤
This is why we all need a 3D printer
Please no. People be printing trash every day and we don't need more. I bet this thing fell apart already as well.
That's cool, but that springing could be a great package protector
Ini yg disebut daur ulang sampah yg Kren 😍❤️
I love what you do.
Beautiful! Please can I get a link to the Stl file? Please
In the description
Woo yeah
@@function3D cant find the link in description ??
@@ms_vibe9918 first line in the description is a link, this: www.printables.com/es/model/446091
@@function3D thanks alot
Te amamos Juanes. Este vídeo me dio ganas de escucharlo todo el día
Una consulta ✋ Hay alguna alguna forma de unir los filamentos de diferentes botellas? O te quedan rollos de filamentos separados? Porque mi hermano se compró una impresora anteayer y estamos viendo el tema del reciclado de filamentos. Te preguntaba más que nada para no tener que tener 300 rollos pequeños de filamentos
This is just an fantastic, I love it 👍😍
EXCELENTE...!!!!!
In Germany you get 0.25€ per bottle and pay too much for electricity to melt it down 😂🙈 but nice project
Is it cheaper than buying a lamp though?
Nice improvement, i am sure there are even more things you can design and do, like the table stoppers that prevent scratching on the wall, or door stoppers. Artisanally wise, lamps are hot, so i would probably stick to things on the table, but hey!! shout out on you for trying, afterall we are going towards the LED lamps stage.
Very cool!!!
Nice work. How much of your time it take to make a kg of filament?
I mean... The bottle was still useful as a bottle before it got turned into filament. Not quite "trash" but 👍
A really nice idea that i liked! That lamp looks cool
That is a super cool light!
The future is going to be every single household having a multi-material 3D printer and printing whatever they want, of course they're not gonna be able to print something as complex as a phone but it'll still be very useful
Give it time, and maybe questionably obtained schematics.
trashure
excellent Port-Manteau ! 😮👏
That looks really cool
That's true Recycling! Love it!
Wow it was soo Awesome 👍👏👌
Freaking awesome!
Plastic ka solution👍
Bro thank you I've always wanted to be able to upcycle my bottles better now I have a goal to set to be able too 💯
It's probably better than the filament we buy
Your videos. I watch every time they pop up.
That looks very good
you should print mini water bottle shaped Keychain.
This is so amazing
What else do you do after cutting the bottle, to get the filament? That has huge potential imo.
Lookup pet filament diy
Excellent very excellent very nice 💯💯👏👏👏👌👌👌👍👍👍 very beautiful very good
Mola. Genial idea usarlo para una lámpara además. Y por su puesto, excelente tema de fondo.
Bellissima impressionante il tuo lavoro
What is the model of that 3D printer you used to make this?
Linda luminária, queria o stl
Nice work!
Looks really nice 👍 ❤
That's so cool!!!
That's incredible
This is amazing
YES! This is beautiful, I was wondering if this could be done with recycled plastic and I'm so happy it can be.
radical, nice job!
Just WOW😮❤
Simple and beautifull!
Can you show how you made the plastic Recycler to make your round filament
how much do you think one can sell that lamp for?
The truth is working,but you basically didn't melt.the plastic just deform it. When you pull over the 1.7mm hole then the plastic strip deform a circular wire. Is means the "filament" will be hollow. You have to change the extrusion, then good to go.
Best one yet
It enrages me that you get so many BEAUTIFUL filament pullstrusions 😂 honestly bravo! ❤️
What a setup... Put this in every stem classroom
Wow, that is so cool 😀
I need to make one of those lmao
Excellent 👍
Can you show us how to build this
Wow nice, the best idea. 👍👍👍
Song: La Camisa Negra - Juares
Классно! 👍🤝
All that is amazing
"Bottle lamp"
Finally! Someone who didn't reprint another plastic bottle 🙂
Omg La Camisa Negra. I love Juanes
I wonder if recycling can be applied to resin printing efficiently
Can you share the stl/gcode please?
Awesome creativity love from India 🇮🇳 ❤
That’s sweet!!!!
Can you share a link on how you made that bottle cutter
Genial, es increible, tendras el archivo para hacer mi propia lampara?
Ingenious and Useful
самый лучший пылесборник в мире который я видел когда-либо!!!
This is the best business idea
One could also stick the bulb into the pet from the beginning ;)
Wow! Wo-ooow. To be honest, the most amazing thing that was maded on 3d printer. And you can even take it off to play with it!
Marvelous 🤩😊.
Хороший фильтр для воды 👍
Muy bonita lámpara 🪔