Topic: Favorite Bed Heater / Print Surface / Hot End Upgrade?
I've been on an upgrade spree with my SD3, and I am loving the print improvements I am getting from it. I am weighing the pros and cons of a new bed heater, and which print surface to go with. I've done the standard Kapton of course, home depot glass and hair spray... I went to Lowes today and they cut a 12" x 12" granite tile down to my needed 8" x 8". And so far I really love not needing to use clamps anymore, like I did with glass, the great print adhesion (using hairspray as well, should I not?) And also I went with a black piece of high gloss honed granite. It makes prints look great as they are printed, and is much easier to adjust my bed alignment to the extruder head. Plus the granite is absolutely rock solid when it came up to temperature.
The stone seems 0.15mm +/- tolerance, but not sure how that will play out with actual printing, that was simply dial gauge measurements. The other down side is additional heating time for the bed. I have already modded my sanguino board's traces to the power MOSFET for the bed heating element with beefy 16 gauge wire jumpers, and that actually really seems to have helped my stock bed element performance improve quite a bit.
That in addition to the mighty 12 V 54 amp power supply upgrade. Anyhow I haven't tested my lower heat-up-time-to-print limits yet, but from my observations it's looking in the 15 minute neighborhood with the granite tile. With the Glass it was 8-10 minutes.
Update: Some pictures of my setup...
I'm not stuck on any one solution, just really wanting to maximize my experience with my baby, and am curious if I'll get better heat up times/ flatness from a different setup? Or preferably if I just upgrade my heating element if I will see a great improvement in my granite heat up time.
Honestly the granite seems amazing as far as printing goes, also the weight of it seems to help dampen any print vibrations when printing at higher speeds
Using stock hot end with a Lawsy MK 5 extruder (thanks Lawsy). But I am tempted to upgrade to an E3d so I can print with experimental filament. I'll be picking up a filastruder and filawinder (thanks IanJohnson) once my tax return check arrives. Anyhow is the E3d worth it, better alternative? What are the exact benefits besides being able to go up to nuclear temperatures of 300C?
Thanks for anyone who takes the time to read these ramblings.


