Your Comprehensive Guide to 3D Printing Miniatures (PART 1)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ค. 2024
- #anycubic #photonmonom5spro
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//Other Links//
Vent your printer: • Fumes be GONE! Versati...
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Cones of Calibration v2: / discord
How to read Cones of Calibration: • This FREE 3D calibrati...
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Complete guide to supports: • A Complete Guide to Su...
//Discord Server - Extra Videos - STL Files//
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//Time Stamps//
00:00:00 - INTRO
00:00:53 - Two Important Considerations Before You Get Into Resin 3D Printing
00:02:36 - THE PRE FLIGHT CHECKLIST
00:02:58 - Printer + Disclaimer
00:03:37 - What Comes With Your Printer
00:04:00 - Sponsored Message
00:05:58 - 1.) IS YOUR PRINTER MECHANICALLY SOUND?
00:06:50 - Check Motor Z Rod And Linear Rails
00:08:12 - Grease Z Rod if needed
00:08:25 - Check UV Light
00:09:29 - Check LCD
00:09:55 - Listen For Fans
00:10:12 - Creality Example
00:12:15 - Check Fep Condition
00:12:58 - If Your Printer Is Not Mechanically Sound
00:13:35 - 2.) IS YOUR BUILD PLATE LEVEL?
00:18:20 - A Better Way To Level It
00:22:27 - Elegoo Example
00:25:37 - Verify Build Plate Is Level
00:35:05 - Removing Prints From The Build Plate
00:36:55 - Adjusting Your Burn In Layer Setting
00:38:54 - Identifying An Unlevel Build Plate
00:39:04 - Vat Cleaning After Failed Prints
00:41:19 - Troubleshooting Prints Not Sticking To Build Plate
00:43:44 - 3.) IS YOUR RESIN TEMP OVER 20°C / 68°F?
00:44:51 - 4.) IS THE RESIN CALIBRATED TO THE PRINTER?
01:01:42 - Best Practices Handling Resin And Cleaning
01:05:23 - 5.) FINDING GOOD PRESUPPORTED MINIATURES
01:09:14 - Printing Our First Miniatures
01:11:40 - Topping Up Resin Mid Print
01:12:12 - Pausing The Print To Check Progress
01:13:01 - Inspect Your Miniatures
01:14:51 - A Quick Miniatures Review
01:15:25 - Adding Better Rafts
01:15:50 - Removing Prints From The Build Plate
01:17:12 - You Can Remove Your Supports Now
01:17:41 - Washing Your Minis
01:24:26 - Or You Can Remove Your Supports Now
01:29:04 - Curing Your Minis
01:32:45 - Removing Tiny Supports You Missed Earlier
01:33:08 - How To Have A Good Time With Super Glue
01:33:41 - Congratulations You Know What You're Doing
01:34:14 - Anti Aliasing
01:35:55 - Decreasing Layer Height
01:36:12 - THE POWER OF THE PRE FLIGHT CHECK LIST
01:37:30 - Whats Coming In Part 2
01:37:56 - THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT
01:38:22 - DISCORD SERVER WITH THE BEST PRINT SUPPORT
01:38:38 - Behind The Scenes Videos
01:38:48 - EPIC STL FILES - บันเทิง
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Anycubic Tough Resin Ultra ordered - thank you!
what about large builds that should be hollow?
Here’s your engagement comment. You’ve gotten me into resin printing and I love the stuff you do. Wish you luck with TH-cam.
An hour long video explaining 3D-printing from one of the channels I’ve best seen explain 3D-printing, just as I’m looking to take the plunge. I suspect this video will become a holy grail to a lot of new printers on TH-cam
I can’t not comment on that for the algorithm, can I? Thank you, this is incredible
This is my holy grail for printing!!! I am a first-time user of a resin printer and this video has set me up for success! Thank you so much for this in-depth guide and it has been very detailed! Also having the same printer made this so much more easy!
Discovered your channel like a week ago currently in the process of upgrading to whatever bamboo puts out next February (hopefully fingers crossed). Now, because of you, I'm planning on picking up a GKTwo and going down the resin rabbit hole and learning how to paint miniatures as it looks like a lot of fun. Hopefully in a few months Ill be learning how to paint on some Turnip28 minis. This video for me was perfect timing couldn't have asked for a better coincidence. Hopefully TH-cam starts spinning up the algorithm for you, your art is everything the algorithm loves so fingers crossed.
You won't regret the GKTwo. I've had a few different printers and it's been my favorite so far.
Buying a flex plate for my printer was probably the best thing I've ever done for this hobby. It's such a game changer.
Ho yes. Big game changer😊
Ordering my first printer and accessories this week. Any other things you recommend the change the game I can get out the gate?
I got a mars 4 max just before Christmas using sunlu plant based resin and its been absolutely flawless, really surprised at how well it's gone. Much of this is due to watching videos like yours helping get the setup pretty much right out of the box.
Plug and play I'd give it an 8/10
This video is very good. It would have been better a year ago when I was so disgusted with print failure it took almost a year to get back into printing ....
you are a beacon in the dark. Guiding lost souls to redemption and knowledge. Your content is gold and if I weren't a poverty stricken student I would donate to you
I recently got into printing after christmas and I kept looking for a coprehensive video like this! Killer work and your videos inspired me to make the leap to start!
Saturn 3 ultra. Hooking up was 5 minutes. Wifi? 5 minutes. Zeroing the plate was 5 minutes. I printed 3 Cones of calibration to dial in exposure time. took me about 10 minutes to get the stl through lychee slicer, 1 minute to upload it to my Saturn 3 ultra, 50 minutes to print. Altogether 3:30 hours to dial it in and understand. Been happily printing perfect pre-supported minis since. Cure and dry is super simple.
My bigger issue was I could only set it up in my living room. Bought a walk-in hydroponics tent 4x4 feet, an in-line fan + hoses, and one of those cheap airco window adapter kits, propper half face mask with propper rated filters, nitril gloves and for laughs a lab coat. I do all my resin handling inside the test until it's clean and cured. Keep everything contained in there.
Ease of use? 10/10. Safety? 8/10.
How is this setup doing a month later? Have the same printer in the living room with a grow tent + ventilation all set up yesterday and wondering if you've felt any ill effects since posting this comment
That sounds like a pretty nice setup if you're missing an extra "printing room", everything but family-compatible though 😂
The Lab Coat was a brilliant touch. XD Heinz would approve.
I got my GK Two like 2 weeks ago, and I got my Bambu P1S 2 days later. I've found it all to be really easy and straightforward if you simply just want to find cool stuff and print it out. There is so much more depth if you want it, but it seems like it's really not necessary if you're not that kind of person. Personally I'm a bit of a deep diver and when I get interested in a new hobby by the time I go to get something I've watched so much content and so many guides and tutorials and tips and tricks etc that I go to the store and tell the worker something like "I'm new, this is my first X" and then within a minute I realize I actually know more than they do about it. Within 5 min I'm somehow explaining stuff to them haha. Idk, I'm technical and logical minded.. all of the aspects of the deeper side of 3d printing are right up my alley. I love tweaking and modifying and testing and trying to improve things and make them better than the last time. I gotta be honest though, I got into this for resin printing but once I got the P1S I realized how huge of a gap there is between resin and FDM. You can tell that all of the resin printer manufacturers really aren't sure what to do next to improve resin printing. We've hit diminishing returns on screen resolution and the next big thing for resin printing really isn't obvious I don't think. Manufacturers are doing stuff like adding the heaters and carbon filters and what not but I feel like they're all kind of just flailing because they don't really know what to do next or what we want. For FDM it seems like the bambu machines came out and now there is a very clear benchmark. Stuff like their AMS with RFID in the spools where you just put a roll in and the AMS reads the RFID and just auto applies the best settings for that material in your slicer. Like I said, I'm a deep diver, but having that starting point or if I just want to print something quickly having the capability to just put a spool in my AMS, slice a plate, and hit print and having it just work is a God send. I love the depth and breadth of options, but I love that they are just that... Options. REQUIRED complexity is often tedious IMO, but easy use as a baseline with optional complexity for those that want it is what they should be striving for and I think Bambu nailed it. And yes I know, it's nowhere near as deep as an open source system but you're also trading away a significant portion of your user experience and ease of use for that. We need a new resin printer to come out that has some feature that none of us even knew we wanted or needed, but once we've tried it we can't ever go back. That is the kind of stuff that pushes industries forward. I'm guessing for the next year or 2 that is going to be better implementation of heaters and filters (not that hard to improve currently since most of them just slapped aux units into their machines without thought just to say they have it), maybe some kind of auto bed leveling that makes manual leveling a thing of the past, improvements to the resin itself to make it less toxic and easier/cleaner/safer to work with, better wireless/app integration so we can more easily and quickly send and start prints, and maybe some kind of build camera to check print progress remotely. Maybe with that camera they can do stuff like the X1C and use some AI algo to monitor prints and auto cancel failures. Obviously that will be way harder with resin since your print is submerged in resin for the first 30+ minutes at least. Who knows, maybe there is a better way to do this all together. I'm excited to continue learning though and I'm here for the ride to see where it all goes! (Your videos have been super helpful and informative btw, thank you)
For me it became a hobby as it lead me down the rabbit hole of making my own terrain and miniatures.
I started resin and fdm printing at about the same time. I immediately found resin printing to be much easier.
My 3 main milestone points of my "journey" were:
Getting over the seemingly ubiquitous newbie view that you need to chase the minimum exposure time you can possibly get away with because your detail is going to suffer if you dare go anything over this, I've dialled in and had a blast just printing out minis.
Realising how critical temperature is (far more, imo, than exposure) to successful printing and sorting out a heated enclosure.
Finding Sunlu ABS which is by far the most resilient resin for minis I've tried (ok with the exception of eSun hard tough, but that's twice the cost).
I found I quickly fell in to a routine for post processing that makes it pretty straight forward. Routine maintenance is... not that routine anymore now I treat my fep like a catholic treats their private parts (don't touch it... don't even look at it as much as possible).
I agree actual printing is not a hobby, but I do think there is some amount of learning to be done to get there.
I popped this on to listen in the background while supporting and slicing files, and hoo boy - when you were talking about the settings on your Wash+Cure station I was *staring* at that LED next to "WASH" just waiting for the inevitable... I haven't had such a good belly laugh in a long time! I'm so glad you kept that in the video. I... may have done that once or twice... XD
Already 3D print but had this going in the background. Good video for starters and I still picked up a few tips.
Absolutely amazing content! I'll come back to this video again and again! Really great job and what the community needed.
EDIT: just past the 1hour mark and this video is full of great info for pretty much any level of hobbyist. I especially loved the section around the 1:11:00 mark where you discuss tips for how to actually arrange the build plate. So many videos focus on orientation and completely gloss over strategies to put the most models on a plate while maintaining good printing practices like FEP health and easy post processing. Thank you!
This is perfect for my brother who just got a new printer. I know I can give him the key details but this is a perfect video to share
Sure man, i'll feed the algorithm. Started printing in November 23, so 2 months ago. I'm in the UK, so had a bit of a blip with failures due to low temperature, but even with that I've not found the learning curve too bad. Not quite plug and play, but probably comparable to getting an airbrush. Certainly not a hobby by itself, but with some depth if you get into it. I've had to learn some things, but I've enjoyed doing it and it's been well worth my time.
And thanks for all the super helpful info. Channels like this have made it way easier to get up to speed and you've definitely saved me some headaches and nightmares
Resin 3d printing has been a 7/10 on a plug and play for me.
I've been printing for a while and done everything from mounting magnetic build plates, swapping out my FEP, and changing resin a ton of times. TH-cam and Reddit have solved any issues I've had with simple searches and without any need to ask for specific help
I use the space of 2 IKEA 14 by 14 in lack tables. The setup lives in my living room with a ceiling fan and I mostly print in good weather when I can open a window.
It's a 3/10 on the mess factor which is unfortunate but not the end of the world with silicone mats and newsprint and gloves.
This is a hell of a video! I expect you'll get lots of people referring to it when people are getting their first resin printer.
Question for you (and everyone): Any downsides to removing models from supports before prying from the build plate? Seems like it'd save IPA and lessen wrecks from cracked rafts...
You want to wash and cure the supports too, because if you just dump them into the trash post-printing, they are highly, highly toxic. Yes they're going to the dump, but that doesn't meant they need to be even more damaging to the environment.
Can’t wait for part 2. Thanks for all you do.
I’ve had an anycubic mono x for about a year and it has been churning along nicely. I’ve been following your pre print checks for a few months and it’s made a difference in many prints. Keep it up bud. I’m liking the more free form audio. Makes it feel like your shooting the shot with your buddy
Finished the video. Wow it is a lot of info. Well done! This is definitely a resource to come back to again and again
This was an awesome tutorial on resin printing. Like an actual tutorial showing all the steps and possible issues. Amazing work!
Amazing content, please keep up with this serie!
This is awesomely thorough. Thank you!
Suspect I'll be coming back to this one time and time again, thanks for putting in the effort to put this video together.
Really enjoy all your video's, looking forward to your different video formats you have been talking about and really hope your Patreon takes off! You deserve it!
One of the best videos on resin printing I've watched, thanks a lot!
this is a long and great detailed video, thanks for putting your heart and soul in this.
Keep up the good work, thanks for the videos!
Thank you for covering the settings on all the different slicers! It's nice not having to jump through 6 different videos to see that.
This video is amazing! I've been printing for a couple of years now and this still gave me a few little tricks. When i was just starting i would have absolutely benefited from this.
Awesome. Gonna bookmark this. Thanks!
That was a great class! Thank you very much! Good job 👍🏾
Love your channel brotha keep up the good work!🍻
Fantastic run down, thank you.
Thank you, after finding some tutorials here and there for starting 3d printing I've found you through this video. I've learned a lot thanks to you! Gonna check the supporting guide
This video came out at the perfect time for me! After the holiday backorder, I finally received my UniFormation GKTwo yesterday. This video is the thing I was just telling myself I should find online as there isn't a comprehensive video (that I've found) on TH-cam that explains in depth the workflow to 3D printing from set up to printing. Thank you so much for giving me the information I was hoping to find and then some that I didn't know to be aware of. So excited for my journey into 3D printing after going through a large part of your online catalogue.
I'm working through some pain printing in a cold garage, these tips are gold!
Thanks for the fun contest! My daughters and I really enjoyed participating and watching all the cool designs come in. Thank you for taking the time to walk through them all. It was great to get your thoughts on them!
I have been 3D printing for almost a year now. I spent about 3 hours setting up my printer one evening and i have maybe spent 2 hours since then cleaning and calibrating my printer. I have printed almost an entire army and a half. It has been smooth sailing. It's so close to plug´n´play as it can be. I have an Elegoo Mars 3 pro, and i love it. Great videos - keep them comming
Quite literally the best title for a video. Thanks for the info.
Dude, this literally could not have come out at a better time.
A really great get starter video. Should be essential viewing for all new resin printer owners. Also perfect timing for me as I've moved my printer, had a couple of fails, so wanted to re level and check my settings were correct. Very helpful to remind me what to do, picked it dome tips, and cleared up nagging doubts. Thanks.
Bro, awesome content! I’ve been printing with resin since og anycubic photon came out. Still learnt a lot!
I've been watching this video over and over in anticipation. And i finally made the move and bought a Saturn 3. Huge thanks for all the tips in this video 🤘
Jesus mate, this is the best 3d printing video I've ever come across! Thanks very much for tips!
Appreciate the content you're putting out.
just getting into 3d printing and this video answered so many questions in a really entertaining fashion! instant follow
You're a bloody legend, going start to finish explaining pretty much every step applicable (with bookmarks no less) is a massive undertaking :)
Hi. Thank you SO MUCH for making this video. It was, in all respects, an epic production. I designed and built my own FDM 3D printers and have just decided to take the plunge, so to speak, into resin.
I have never owned a resin printer so I am a rank newbie at it. Your video has told me pretty much everything I will need to know in just one video. I cannot thank you enough.
This is such an amazing video. There’s so much misinformation and bull in 3D printing and everything here is mostly on point. Amazing work!
Hello and thank you for the guide!
as a tip for cleaning, I've got these plastic trays like the kind they use in cafeterias. I use those as my work space, my 3D printer is on one in case anything leaks out, etc...
they're plastic, they clean easily and they're not too expensive to replace if they're screwed being cleaning.
This is most defiantly the highest quality masterpiece of a video that I have seen on TH-cam EVER! The amount of detail and care put into this is immense, the fact that you go through multiple different software and multiple printers is amazing. This is the best way to get into the hobby, I felt so comfortable doing my first print after this. Thank you so much!
The handheld camera and diligent editing made the non-script a non-issue, congratulations :D
Thanks for this comprehensive guide, it helped me a lot when configuring my first printer and I still come back here when troubleshooting. Keep up the good work 👏
Love the content waiting for part 2
Wow, quite the guide - saying it's comprehensive is actually the truth this time. Like your idea of overlapping small prints so they are easier to get off the build plate and wash. I'll use that technique when I print out some n-scale seagulls.
This is hands, down, the very best beginner resource for 3D resin printing. Loved the detail and your methodical approach. Liked and subscribed 🎉
Just found your channel, I'm thinking of getting into printing and you have a great channel I'm glad to see you're going to give this a real go you can do it.
this is by far the most helpfull video I've seen on the subject, thnak you man!
This is great I am really rooting for you and making his work
This is a fantastic guide for the 'new to printing' like me :D just got a elegoo mars 4 max as my first printer.
I really appreciate the time and effort you have taken to break every step down and fully explained the whys and why nots on each element of 3d printing setups.
Personally i think this is the best guide out there for first time printing!
If I could like this video 100 times, I absolutely would! In lieu of that I'm going to be directing anyone and everyone I know who's involved in resin printing to this video. So much fantastic info that I didn't know I needed! Thank you!
Thanks. Totally inexperienced and you've enlightened me enough I'm willing to give it a try.
I've been moderately successful printing to date, this video has filled the gaps, answered a load of my outstanding questions so thank you.
One thing I'd like to see is a list of concerns and things to be aware of when you own pets and you get into 3d printing. Things to be careful of, ect.
thank you for this! just recently got a cheap printer and having a good luck around at info to make notes of!
Great Video - really useful information.
Great video just starting my 3d journey.
Saturn 3 ultra
Coming from an FDM printer (Ender 3), this is a whole new skill to learn. New programs, different calibrations to make, etc. Thanks in advance for the advice.
Awesome video man🖤
Just picked up at anycubic m3, and have successfully printed 5 things, 2 miniatures for D&D , and I have found it way easier than I expected. Wish I would have got into it much sooner!
This was great!
A great video, so informative and clear. Answered a lot of the questions I had about settings etc. Thank you. Subscribed )O(
THIS IS ABSOULUTLEY AMAZING VIDEO I AM ABSOULUTLEY SO THANKFUL!!!
Greate! Many thank dude!
I love this channel, it's fantastic.
Great video, been printing a while myself and its always good to get back to basics and pick up some tips and tricks! One thing that might be worth mentioning for new starters in the next part is how to dispose of used alcohol?
I'll be honest . . . I will probably never jump into resin printing due to the potential mess that I could nay! will, create with resin, the odors/fumes combined with my lack of ventilation options (in my particular space and climate). HOWEVER, I'll say this video was fantastic just walking through and showing how the basics of the whole process works. I really didn't get how things practically worked (and some of your best practices of handling things). I just wanted to let you know this was some really good work and thank you.
I’ve never gotten a resin printer because I was always afraid of all the print fails I’ve seen but this video has me really wanting to try using one now, definitely a lot less scared of printing
greate explenation, helps a lot
I jumped in with no prior knowledge this past weekend. With some free models and auto-support, I was able to make a bunch of decent miniatures. There have been some printing errors due to rookie mistakes, but being able to make a good tabletop mini the same day the printer arrived makes it pretty accessible in my opinion.
Edit: I picked up a Saturn 3 Ultra and some water-washable resin, with a washing and curing station.
This got me from thinking "I can't get into resin printing" to having a printer and printing some lovely Legion figures. Thank you!
This is the greatest tool I’ve watched thanks man!
I meant that as the video being a tool haha not you man! Amazing resource
Bro your channel kicks ass just wanted to let ya know!
Very good video, one of the more useful ones for mini oriented printers. Love the rest of your shit too!
I'm not even finished with this video. I have had my printer for couple of weeks and have had some issues right out the gate. Don't get me wrong I learned a lot from other content creators before I started but I still wasn't really prepared for the problems.
Once in a Six goes over the things that no one really talks about. Explains it like I'm 5 because I don't have the time to learn a new instrument I just want some new miniatures for my game. THANK YOU for sharing all the things you have mentioned thus far. I just needed to comment while I have a moment to process my thoughts.
Going over the key exposure settings and understanding how to calibrate the printer along with Resin temperature in this video is probably some of the best I have seen yet. Only thing I can say from my own experience is adding a magnetic plate was well worth all the scraping trouble.
Thanks again Once in a Six, i'll be following for my tips as I go through learning my new favorite hobby!!!
I only regret that I can't give you enough thumbs up for part 1!!
The most simply explained and comprehensive “starter guide”. I’m looking to get into resin printing and have no idea !! Watched a few other bits of other users content. Still don’t get it.
Watched this …. Now I got it !!!
It's a good guide, but there are two things I'd add.
First is ALWAYS use a 2 step cleaning process (3 if you want perfection). IPA gets contaminated fast and that contamination stays on the print after washing, which will lead to sticky models with residue stains on them. The thing is, contaminated IPA still works well at removing the bulk of the resin; so it's okay to use dirty IPA as the first stage of your wash process. A second bath of clean IPA can then be used as a rinse to remove the remaining contamination. You'll find that your "clean" IPA lasts substantially longer before residue starts to become apparent and when it does, it can then become the first stage of the wash process. The upshot of all this is you will get much better results with substantially less IPA usage and it doesn't require you to buy a wash and cure station or fill up large tubs with many litres of IPA. My entire wash process holds less than 2 litres of IPA.
Secondly, your burn in layers shouldn't be adjusted in multiples of 10 to 15 seconds, because they shouldn't even be that high to begin with. People have been doing this for so long because they don't know any better, but the reason they've had to do this is due to trapped resin between the build plate and FEP physically forcing the build plate up and creating unintentionally thick layer heights on those first few layers. People have then compensated with increased exposure time which also results in elephant's foot on prints. The correct solution is to add before exposure rest times on burn in layers to allow the resin to escape and the build plate to settle to the correct layer height (as the print continues, the build plate will stop trapping resin and the issue will go away anyway). For reference, my burn in layer exposure time is only 6 seconds, my burn in layer rest time is 30 (and reduces by 1 second every layer, use uvtools to set this up after slicing). The result is still perfect print adhesion that's easy to remove, but crucially I have NO ELEPHANT'S FOOT!
blog.honzamrazek.cz/2022/02/a-step-by-step-guide-for-the-perfect-bed-adhesion-and-removing-elephant-foot-on-a-resin-3d-printer/
Yeah I didn't buy a 3d printer for ages because I thought it was too complex you videos were the thing that changed my mind
Holy in depth batman! Can you get any more in depth! Ive been resin printing for a year now and still watched the whole thing. Good stuff!
A good alternative for newspaper is those water basins you put under pot plants. They're cheap and UV resistant so you can leave them in the sun(along with leftover supports) to cure where the resin can be scraped of easily. I made a lid for one out of wood and fly screen so i can leave the dirty water for water washable resin to evaporate without bugs and stuff getting in.
Thanks for a really good overview! Will you also be doing something about painting miniatures?
Thank you bro
You posted this video like you knew I was just getting into this.
AYYY!!!! Thank you for the shoutout for the Cones! :D :D Im so happy to see you're still using it!
No worries! Hope my teaching for it doesn't cause you too many headaches over on your server haha
This is a complete guide you provided that can help a lot of people. However, to improve the method for removal of printed parts from the build plate, once can use a razor sharp blade, it won't damage the printed parts. I usually print without any support, that is how important this method of not damaging any part of the printed object. All that is needed to start removing the printed part is to insert some air between the bottom layer and the build plate, a sharp edge tool can help more than the provided blunt edge tool by the printer manufacturer. It is not by chance it is challenging removing printed parts from the build plate using the provided tool, it is very thick.