My Prusa MK4 is now clearly better!
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It's a pity that the Prusa MK4 hides its beautiful planetary gearbox under a cover. I wanted to see it and made transparent covers using FDM, resin, and my new CNC router. Which result is the best?
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Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
00:44 Planetary Gearbox
01:19 Clear FDM Printing
03:11 Machining on the Carvera CNC
07:15 Clear Resin Printing
08:26 Finishing the parts
10:34 Sponsor
#3Dprinting #cnc #resin
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Which clear cover would you make yourself? FDM, resin or CNC?
Oh, and check out our CNC Kitchen products at cnckitchen.store/ or at our resellers www.cnckitchen.com/reseller
Did you say AluminUm? German passport revoked!
I would go for resin. Best results, easy and cheap. Also there is poor documentation for cnc.
As I’m still learning fusion 360, I don’t know all the best tool path strategies for different parts, I typically only use parallel cuts for my projects because all the other options take to long to calculate for my slow computer, i would go with resin because it’s easier and still quite effective. I am currently testing siraya tech blu clear v2 resin. It looks good, I do t really care if it yellows, I just got the bottle today so still need to dial it in, however I have personally tried nova3D ultra clear and it sucks! It’s a total pain to work with, I just could not get the exposure times to work for me and there were issues but I was a novice at sla when I was experimenting with it so maybe I just didn’t know enough about finding correct exposure settings, but it was still pretty cloudy even when I did get it to print, but yeah maybe less yellowish.
Cure the resin in an oxygen inhibitor, then spray paint it with clear PU varnish.
I would go for the FDM since it is the cheapest, it only costs a spool of clear petg after all and gets the information across. Resin doesn't look good enough for how messy it is and a CNC of the quality needed is probably another mk4 or two. CNC looks the best but for me not enough to be worth it.
For PETG and acrylic you can use a heat gun to slightly melt the surface to make is clearer.
i also had the instant reflex: just torch the acrylic - fire sometimes is the answer :D
Came here to say the same thing. Instant clear
You all beat me to it. Fire for the win! That is usually my go to.
I had not considered fire. Why not? We use it to get air out of resins.
Just not on polycarbonate.
On acrylic you can easily use flame, just don't overwork it. It's called flame polishing, gives pretty good results
you can't beat it, I get a lot of acrylic guards and parts made, the guys only ever flame polish, the results are perfect.
I was really expecting him to flame polish the part. Few quick passes with a torch and it would have been crystal clear.
Came to say this, thought it was commonly known.
I didnt know and I thank you for this comment. Ill try it!
at home, what kind of flame can i use?
For a tip on clear resin, I've seen that adding a couple drops of blue resin to your clear will really help counteract any yellowing. Common practice with detergent and white clothes. Also one of the earliest known "life hacks" that people have used for hundreds of years of white clothes, to add blue dye.
Old lady hair trick
Once used to hide yellow teeth.
So to make white ton more cold you just added little bit blue, clever...
Good one! I'll try that.
@@CNCKitchen if your resin can withstand heat, heat it for 30-60 mins at 50-60 degree celsius, according to some resin manufacturer.
FDM printed is clear enough to show the gears and layers give it vibe that fits well with 3D printer
I think it would be a cool option to even offer with the kit from Prusa. It's something they could manufacture easily at their print farm
I felt a great disturbance in the 3D printing community, as if millions of Mk4 warranties suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened.
May the Mk4th be with you.
While I too like the CNC aesthetic, I’d probably work out-of-the-box and try casting clear acrylic in a FDM mold.
Resin mold, acrylic cast
Youw would still end up with any layer lines or inperfections in the cast part so you would have to smooth the mold a lot before you use it.
Make the mold in ABS or similar, and then do a light acetone vapor bath to fuse the layer lines.
I've done this once for a cap screw on a boat's engine. Printed the screw in ABS, smoothed with acetone, made a silicone mold of it and cast some tough resin to make the replacement part.
@@castform57 yeah that’s the idea. PVB smooths with alcohol if you don’t want to mess with ABS. The problem with printing or machining a part directly is you’re stuck with the limitations of the material.
That Nova3D Clear Resin really is as good as they say, I have done a lot of Prints with it and its just awesome, how clear it is and stays. No yellowing, even when baking for 20 minutes in UV light
Nice one! I might actually buy a bottle.
HA! I did the same thing for my MK4 and XL about 2 weeks ago. It was one of the first things I did because I wanted to see the gears. I did the FDM method (using your older video) though it's not as transparent. But the good news is I can always reprint them. Glad to see someone else do this.
Great to hear. I actually already did the first clear cover only a couple of days after I got the MK4. I dig the silk screen on the lid, but seeing the gears is even nicer.
@@CNCKitchen I like the Silk screen too, so I did a MMU print to re-add it. BTW, what oil did you use? As I want to do that to try and get things clearer
And next week part 2: Injection molding, glass etching and blowing.
Nice.
Try using some 2k clear gloss spray paint on those parts. It really makes transparent resin prints stay clear and not yellow. Also cure the resin in a glass jar full of water to prevent yellowing.
Good video! I'm sure a lot of people have considered this topic. In my experience there are clear resins that don't yellow. The Anycubic clear is a good example, as long as the vat is completely cleans of the tints from a previous resin it'll stay nice and clear, adding a little blue resin tint can also help keep some resins from noticeably yellowing. After the sanding of a clear resin part coating it with a clear gloss spray paint will make it transparent too.
Very good tips, thank you !
Any of those 'ceramic' coatings that come with headlamp polish kits work well with a rylic and polycarbonate too.
Another option you should use when 3d printing clear filament is ironing and increase top layers to an imaginary number like 50,000 so every layer is treated as a top layer. I'd also recommend a clear lithium grease for the planetary gear. It looks dry which is good for the video but not good for the gear. I love the cnc machine. I'd like to learn more about it like price and how it could be modified for rigidity and to cut other materials at higher precision.
The price I think is over 5k per machine, I saw it when it hit kickstarter.
Thank you friend @@ShadowVipers
Currently working on a project where we have a lot of trouble because lithium grease is attacking the plastic (swelling it and making it brittle, most likely due to the base formulation not the lithium salt itself). So you might want to check material compatibility first! :)
@@jens5906 Good tip. Thanks!
I think the FDM print suits the reprap stylings of the Prusa really well, but aesthetically I think the CNC part looks so clean and professional. Printing on clean glass with a nice even spray of hairspray also makes it so the bottom layer is extremely transparent.
I love the look of the FDM. Something about seeing those lines make it honest to the materials and making process. The fact that the lines obscure the view a little bit works in favor of seeing the black gasket that hides portion of the gears inside
"...and play with yourself" was meant to b; and play with it yourself. You gotta love what gets lost in translation sometimes. Nice vid, love how clear and clean you make them and honest results with fixes.
Love the CNC cover. It's a great video as always!
Another option could be to use some cut glass and FDM print a frame for it to screw or slide into
While I liked the acrylic piece standalone, I think the resin component looked best on the MK4 as it made the surface behind look almost gold!
Resin looked great!
Not sure if you already have a video on something like this, but I'd love more depth on how you used Fusion to create the model based on the STL!
Would definitely come in handy for many things!
The Carvera looks pretty awesome.
to get a really clear machined part, tooling, speeds and feeds are beyond critical. Best for that is a really sharp endmill, like the acrylic line from datron, or even their diamond line. I use a cvd two flute for that but depending on the features of the part, especially lead in and out are difficult to get clear. for facing i like their 2 flute polished cornerradii facemills, such a nice finish.
Greetings from the zellerfeld r&d machining guru :D
With clear resin. I harden them for a very short time, 5 minutes or so. Then just leave it laying around anders the yellowness will fade. When the yellow is gone I put a clear varnish on it. It'll block uv light and prevent it from becoming more yellow
Resin one can be coated with a thin layer of resin (or mix with IPA) for complete transparency instead of sanding and polishing
That's what i do
Against the usual advice, I print flat functional parts using resin without angling them and adding supports. This actually works great for me 90% or more of the time. I wish people would just try it before resorting to angling the prints.
That works fine if you don't have any overhangs or use a slope for them but your base can be a little wide if your bottom layer exposure time isn't tuned
It also can greatly reduce print time.
What i do with clear uv resin is to put a drop or two of blue or green pigment traslucent. It helps camuflage the yellowish and gives you a glass like look.
You can do a very light clearcoat on the acrylic part, i do it all the time. it might also work on the printed parts
I have printed large pieces with PMMA like resin, from the esun brand, it works perfectly. A true translucent piece after polishing or processing
I think you could get rid of the cloudiness with a butane torch or heat gun. I think the torch would be best because the hot point is highly focused. This means that you could move quickly over the surface and heat only the outside of the part. The heat gun will likely see more part deformation. This is the same method that's used to make ice sculptures clear. By briefly melting the outside of the part the surface remelts and forms crystal structures that are highly transparent.
I've recently printed a new x-carriage/fan ducts for my Anycubic Mega S in clear resin and it came out quite clear. The trick I found for that is to cure the part submerged in water. I was too lazy to sand and polish everything so used a clearcoat on everything which won't touch the hotend, though if I'd known that oil trick I would have used that.
Hitting acrylic with a torch (briefly) or a heat gun (a bit longer) will also smooth out the surface, to a significant degree.
You can also use acetone to smooth it out.
Hi Stephan. This is the first time I feel I have something to advice to you. Your videos are fantastic and I’ve been following them for years. Recently I started my way on Resin 3D printing after years of using FDM. I used SirayaTech blue clear V2 that also yellowish. They recommend bathing for 20 minutes on a 60 degrees Celsius water bath and then expose to sunlight for 30 mins. I haven’t have the time to do so, but leaving the piece to sunlight for some days do clears it a lot. I’ll let you know the results once I follow the manufacturers advice. Thanks a lot for the effort in providing tech oriented videos to the community for such a long time. Very well appreciated !.
Resin turned the best one in this vid! so many useful comments, love the community behind
I prefer the FDM PETG print because it fits with the rest of the printed parts. Great Video!
Fusion360 allows to transform mesh to body. Then you can stich polygons to form one plane. Unfortunately it doesn't work well with rounds and holes. But it is much easier to work with such representation than just mesh.
I was about to wtite the same, but then i figured out that for this simple geometry it ain't worth it:)
Not sure about the FDM or Resin printed ones but its easy to make machined acrylic clear like the raw stock it was cut from. As long as the machined finish is good, flame polishing will make the machined surfaces as clear as the raw stock was.
EDIT: Being a day late to the video, I should have figured that others would have already mentioned the flame polishing aspect with the CNC's acrylic. Regardless though, still worth repeating I suppose since its works so well and is easy as long as you don't stay in once spot long enough to cause blistering... Definitely can take a little bit of time but the results can be amazing.
Resin FTW. I was surprised how much better it looked than the others.
I’m also surprised you didn’t mention the easiest fix. A quick spray of clear coat paint. It fills in all the roughness and dries clean and tough.
that small CNC looks really nice!
visually on the printer i prefer the resin part, but as a CNC operator/programmer i have to say that nothing beats a nice machined part as long as its machinable
For SLA printing it is possible to print directly on the plate with no supports. The final part has a much cleaner and clear finish. The disadvantage is that it is definitely harder to pull the part out. I also suspect that it causes more wear to the build plate.
It might also require some different settings than what you used to for printing normally, but if you really want a clear part it definitely works.
Flex plates are available for resin printing, which I think eliminates the difficulty of removing parts flat on the buildplate, and the accidental damaging of parts.
I installed an off-brand one copying wham bam's design, but haven't actually used it yet
@@MaximilianonMars that's good to know. I no longer need to these prints but it definitely would be nice if I knew that then 😅.
I wonder if the flexible plate has some negative effect on the precision of the parts though. I have never seen them before so I don't really know how flexible they are haha.
Thanks for the great video and I like both the CNC and Resin part. I have a CNC, but I'm new to this game and will take time to be able to make one, but it will be a nice challenge for a small part.
I work as a print finisher at an SLA Resin printing company and we use accura clearview for any clear parts. Then sand to 800 grit and polish for glass clarity
You could use a slab of borosilicate glass and drill the appropriate holes, or you could do a clear epoxy casting and remove the air bubbles on a pressure pot using a vacuum pump, also buffing those resins in a bench buffer with progressively finer grit compound would really improve the clarity.
Loved the CNC work! I would try to polish for better result 😀
Hey Stefan the trick to getting machined acrylic to look nice is to very quickly blast it with a blue flame. It instantly becomes perfect.
CNC for sure is best but im impressed with the resin final finish along with the FDM
The CNC part can be made completely transparent with some clear coat or with chemical polishing, which is a bit of a hassle but works great. And for the yellowing on the resin part, some resins like the Siraya Tech ones have some guidelines to restore its color and depending on the resin, some need a bit of hot air for some minutes for the Fast resins and for the Blu resins you need hot water and then some UV, although the yellowing usually fades after like a week if you don't want to do that. Still, you need to make it transparent with some sanding/clear coat if you print some angles.
Such a cool video !! Well done !
I would go for the CNC one due to its monolithic material strength - and flame polishability.
In my work, we used to use oil cooling for polycarbonates milling to get more transparent finish, i don't know how it works with acrylic but u can try
For clear resin… ESUN makes a clear resin that doesn’t yellow it’s called PMMA-like resin… and it’s pretty amazing
I have MK4 to, and its amazing, we are waiting for mmu3 for mk4
I will give you a tip. In order to totaly remove any marks left by the cnc machine on acrylic you only need to apply heat with a small pocket blow torch. But remember not to use any alcohol on it later as it will explode (im serious). Effect looks like a perfect acrylic cast. Totally worth trying. Remember not to apply to much heat, just a touch of the flame does the job.
I glad you went back to the iconic "guten tag" welcome! :D
if you "burn" the acrylic part in the kitchen or with a lighter you can obtain a complete clear part. i work with acrylic and thats the way that i use when i sand the acrylic. is the perfect "polish" method because is not abrasive and "melt" the first layer of the acrylic
you can get Acrylic 3d printer filament, called PMMA. Use that same technique as before with PETG, and then smooth it with acetone, though if you want to do better, you could flame polish it after the acetone evaporates. I find PMMA sticks to anything and doesn't warp despite needing a 100C bed. But it soaks up quite a bit of water so you do need to dry it
I have made water clear resin prints without yellowing. I use elegoo clear tough resin and do not exceed 1 minute final cure. Sand with 600 grit water paper, then 2 coats of clear enamel. Looks like glass and much stronger than FDM. Works great for cosplay jewels
With a flex plate you can easily print such parts with resin directly flat on the build plate, you don't have to use supports. I've printed bigger ones before without any issues and the surface quality of the bottom is basically polished already
I have a small printing company and when I print parts like this with resin, I just print them directly on the build plate. Far less sanding needed that way. They're usually easy enough to just pry/knock off but heating the build plate does the trick if they stick. Better yet, you can get magnetic spring steel sheets that stick to the platform and make printing large flat bottom surfaces directly on the plate easy as pie. Just flex the sheet and everything detaches perfectly.
I like them all. I make a fair few mechanical housing and would love to try to make them with transparent filaments. I am going to go back and try to recreate your filament print with my products, mostly to see how transparent I can get mine. I have not tried to carve anything with the CNC mode for my Snapemaker, but I have a pile of polycarbonate someone gave me.
On your polycarbonate, you could try micro-gloss. However, it seems you have done very well using machine oil. You could also use micro-mess on the flat surface to increase transparency, but again, you have done well with your finish.
Smooth glass bed works very well for smooth face with your clear petg/pla printing method!
I hope more Carvera content is coming! I’m waiting for mine to be delivered. 😊
I've got something else in the pipeline. Even though the price tag is quite steep, it had been a breeze to use so far!
@@CNCKitchen Fantastic, can't wait! Yes, it's quite steep as you said; but considering the versatility and feature set, I couldn't pass it up. Excited to see what you have coming! :)
The nova 3D uv resin is very good, very clear, and resists yellowing. I use it for printing small clear parts like Head light lenses for model cars. Clear coat the parts with Mr Hobby GX112 UV cut gloss clear coat paint. The clear works similar to your oil but it is permanent and fills all the little gaps making the part super clear, and the UV cut clear coat will also help prevent yellowing over time.
i've commented this before, but you can get GLASS clear PETG prints using the Salt remelting method. Simply mask over the surfaces you want to be clear with Kapton tape and then remelt like you would normally. the part that comes out will be like glass.
I was going to leave a comment saying to add a few drops of blue tint to the clear resin to prevent yellowing, but I see that many other resin users have beat me to the punch. When it comes to removing the micro abrasions from the CNC tooling on the acrylic, you can, as others have said, heat treat it a little, or "flame polish" it.
Ahh... you tricked me into watching a carvara comercial! Thank you. I love it!
Well done!
yeeee new video love u brothra
Never thought I would get clickbaited by CNCKitchen. Long time fan. 😂
I just finished watching your old plaster annealing video.
I wonder how that would effect the clarity in these prints
it would be interesting to see if over time the small air pockets join together or stay separated or if the cloudiness is not from air and in fact caused by internal stress
Love that cnc!
This is supper cool!
Though one potential problem I see with using oil is that dust would probably collect on the part.
Suggest Prusa print transparent covers as an option.
If I was making one I would use resin, but instead of oil I’d use a clear gloss. This gave me glass clear results.
If I had one I would go CNC though, and see if I could flame polish it.
I produced some cover glasses out of clear resin - coating them with clear coat paint does prevent the yellowing from happening.
I had pretty good results using siraya tech blu clear resin.
The one I could make today is the FDM one. With some tweaking it would come out really nice.
Can you use a light layer of resin over the FDM to fill the layer lines and leave a clear surface?
I actually think the resin one looks the clearest. I'd be interested to see on made from a resin that doesn't yellow so much when curing.
I love the CNC aesthetic, but considering it's price, I would go with the resin printed.
Honestly, now taking a look at the resin part a second time, it turned out almost better than the CNCd one 😬
Mayermakes resin becomes clearer over time! I saw it at Maker Faire by the maker himself. Great stuff for engineering too.
I just placed an order with Voxel PLA today.
The resin is damn impressive.
Чтобы акрил или оргстекло стало прозрачным после механической обработки, достаточно обдать поверхность пламенем горелки. Можно использовать так называемые турбо зажигалки.
Heat it up with a torch and spray a couple coats of automotive clear coat in a warm environment or heat up the can. You can also cast it in clear resin from making a mold out of the CNCed part. I would do that one.
I'd probably do resin. I've used RESIONE G217 Clear ABS-Like Resin for another project and was pretty happy with the result. It's "non-yellowing", but not cheap.
I am sure the machined part can be painted with a clear coat spray instead of dipping it in oil. Same is usually done on car headlights after their restoration.
resin is always great for transparent stuff. I use a photon mono. barely use my FDM (anycubic i3 mega) anymore unless I need something large or made from special materials for robotics stuff.
I want to get a cnc for myself and I was looking into the carvers machine. Could you do a full video on it! I think that would be really interesting.
Resin one looks the best. I also need to check those ultra clear ones though.
Common trick to make the resin print clear and prevent yellowing is to use UV protective 2k clear coat. 1-2 coats of that and it should be good to go.
That oil method sounds interesting, is only for the clear filament or how does it work?
Little blue dye in the resin will clear it up. Hit the acrylic with a torch or use plastic polish on some Q-Tips, it's worth the little amount of time it takes to polish. I liked all 3 though.
Yellowing can be countered with a few drops of blue resin.
What about the gunk you paint onto plastic car headlights after sanding the yellowed plastic off? I did this with my son on his car the other day. Even after sanding at 3K grit and then using polishing compound, the headlights still looked a little foggy, but the protectant stuff filled in the roughness and made the headlights look very clear. I bet this would work wonders on the CNC machined part.
resin looks great
You can try heat-gun or flame torch on Acrylic Part to remove the milky look of Acrylic
For the resin if you spray paint it with clear coat it evens out things and will help with the yellowing too.
You could send out one of the machined acrylic covers and have it vapor polished. It would be clear as glass when done properly.
Your video inspired me to do something similar. Use the FDM print with some minor sanding, and then make a negative cast to allow for a clear resin pour.
Silicone form or directly into the FDM negative?
@@CNCKitchen Silicone, it adds a step, but I think it may be a cleaner look.
I am inclined to go with FDM mostly since I think that it is the least likely to crack but form an aesthetic point of view I prefer the resin or CNC part.
CNC part is the clearest but it's impressive how close you can get with FDM