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  1. #1
    Staff Engineer
    Join Date
    Jan 2014
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    935
    I liked that printer too. They said that it would print soluble support material, and they provide the filament, which as I recall correctly was PVA, and water-soluble. That would be a huge advance in FDM printing that most other printers of this type don't have yet. One issue, though, is that their filament was only available in their own proprietary cartridges, which were rather small, so they could all fit in the bottom of the machine. They were also talking about new software that would let them switch colors more quickly, so something closer to color 3D printing would be possible.

    Other machines I liked were the Rostock and Orion printers from SeeMeCNC http://seemecnc.com/; this was a line of parallel-kinematics (hexabot) machines with much smoother action than most of the Cartesian machines out there (some of those booths were really rocking and rolling when the print jobs were happening), a relatively large build volume especially in Z, but only one extruder. Vendors with single-extruder printers mostly said that support's not necessary, and a lot of them recommended MeshMixer http://www.meshmixer.com/, which generates a "tree" structure that's supposed to be more efficient than the typical straight-line supports.

    The other FDM printer that stood out for me was the "3dmonstr" http://3dmonstr.com/. It's priced higher than most of the others, but it's really built like a tank, with a solid aluminum structure instead of plywood, metal rods, or sheet metal. It has mounts for 4 extruders, so support material is possible, and it takes generic filament. Instead of (wimpy) belting, it runs on C7 ballscrews, and it boasts 100 micron layers and a huge build volume, especially if you get the 24" x 24" x 24" model. For people who've got the bug and want to make larger and more complex parts than the typical FDM printer allows, this might be the machine to aspire to.

    Andrew Werby
    www.computersculpture.com
    Last edited by awerby; 04-05-2014 at 04:10 PM.

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