26

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

[email protected] wrote:

Has anyone tried using the repositionable glue sticks?

Don't bother with glue period. Just set your bed for 110 and use painters tape or Kapton. If you have your height set right both will stick better than any glue you could use and then come right off once cooled with little effort and no damage to the bed since you are not sticking directly to the glass.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

27

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Hey Carl, I've been experiencing warping while my prints are cooling down. Do your think the 110c (coming from 92c) bed temp cause the prints to warp more so during cool down?

28

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

i have read a lot about what to use to adhere projects to beds and what height to set the clearance of the nozzle at but im curious as to how large of a surface area are everyones prints ( mine are pretty large, about half the size of the bed ) and what everyone sets their first layer height at because i'm thinking that the first layer height would have to be close to the clearance of the nozzle. i've tried several adhesives and settled on glue sticks but not with 100% success. i set my clearance at .28mm with a feeler gauge and have modified the bed to be able to adjust all 4 corners and my first layer height is .35mm. this printer is a continually learning process and i'm always up for suggestions. i'm using for production of parts for a $570 million invention that i'm working on until i can have the parts made by injection molding ( if anyone would like to see it they can go to dudad.net ). i look forward to hearing what ideas are out there to prevent warping for larger prints. thanks

29 (edited by Retroplayer 2014-11-18 18:38:49)

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Wow... seriously, something is wrong with your printers if you have to go through so much trouble trying to get your parts to stick. I use a glass bed, hairspray, a properly leveled bed, and 110C bed setting. Parts never lift. And they just pop right off easily after the bed cools.

I would check the temp of your heated bed against what it reports with a kitchen thermometer if I were you. Might not be actually reaching the temperature it says it is. The only time I ever came close to cracking my bed was when I tried abs juice. Never used it again.

30

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

drewsfjord wrote:

Hey Carl, I've been experiencing warping while my prints are cooling down. Do your think the 110c (coming from 92c) bed temp cause the prints to warp more so during cool down?


Warping is caused by uneven cooling. The outside of the part cools before the inside. The solution is one keep the entire part at a higher temp and cool slow as in setting the bed at a higher temp like I do which still does not work with large parts.

The other solution is forced cooling bu having a secondary fan that blows down directly on the part as it is printed. this cause all the layers to cool evenly and usually eliminates warping. I am in the process of designing a low profile fan duct and mount that will cool the active print area below the head. However I may wait till I covert to an E3D first.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

31

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

carl, i read one of your posts that you said you set your clearance to .15mm but what do you set your first layer height at and i think im gonna try the painters tape and 110c bed temp this weekend. how often do you need to change the tape. thanks again dude

32

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

For every glue stick or can of hair spray there seems to be yet another option to get the parts to stick to the platform.  I'm a fan of the blue painters tape simply because it works - it's easy to find when one roll is gone (will be a looooong time though) and I use 210 on the extruder / 90 on the platform.  I've not printed as many parts I'm sure as some of the other members but after all that I've done (and this represents a lot of variety in shapes, sizes, widths and heights - guess what, the painters tape just keeps on working so I'm not sure why some others seem to have so many issues but this combination works reliably for me.

If I bought another machine tomorrow, would I expect the same numbers and the blue tape to work equally well - absolutely not!  I would probably start there, but I would not be surprised if either or both of the temperatures required something slightly different - mostly because these are "production line machines" and they come to you with all of the possible process variables that XYZ can come up with for a company that is basically producing at relatively low volumes.  They probably aren't building or buying batch quantities much beyond 200 or possibly 500 to 1000 of anything simply because they don't produce that many total units and they don't want their money sitting in the warehouse in raw materials.  They want it in the bank and will use it carefully to stay slightly ahead of the production line needs.  If that's the case, then most of their suppliers are also working in small batches and there's where the variations come in.  Whether it's components on the pc-board or extruder tips, the possibilities for variations all contribute to what you get as the "shippable nominal" that passes the inspector that says - yes, it's within this range - it's shipping!  In spite of all that, it still works relatively well and more than anything else it seems to me the ability to get something satisfactory out of your machine is simply a balance of your expectations along with how well you've "learned" some of the critical things about your machine.  Pay attention, take notes, try new things but most of all, don't imagine that your machine should work precisely like mine or 50 others - it will be close but that word is relative for all of us!  Tweaking and tuning is required as are our adjustments in our expectations from time to time.  If this machine retailed for 5,000 instead of 500 my expectations would be significantly different as would everyone else that bought one!  Given the price and the output from it, I still believe it's a remarkable value - as is the blue painters tape!  Thanks.

33

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

dudad.net wrote:

carl, i read one of your posts that you said you set your clearance to .15mm but what do you set your first layer height at and i think im gonna try the painters tape and 110c bed temp this weekend. how often do you need to change the tape. thanks again dude


Depends on my selected layer height but as long as it is under three then I go double the layer height. If the layer height is 3 then I just let my bottom layer be three as well. The idea is that you want the first layer to be squished nearly in half but not quite. But at .3 you have enough surface area the first layer can be .3 as well.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

34

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

ok cool makes sense. sorry it took so long to reply, i drive a truck during the week so i stop here n there to check on my laptop. i usually have my first layer at .35 and my clearance at .28, seems to work ok and i've been using extra strength glue stick and have tried kapton tape but not painters tape yet so ill give it a shot but i am printing a part that pretty much covers half of the bed. some times i get a little warpage on the edges. well gotta crash for a few hrs but if you've got any other advice ill check in a few hrs and thanks a ton for all the help so far

35

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Kapton tape here. I just got fed up cleaning the glue off and the tape works just as well if not better.

Davinci 1.0 with repetier firmware & E3D V6 Lite
Anycubic Photon DLP printer, Einscan-S 3D scanner
Simplify3d, 123D Design, Meshmixer
http://www.thingiverse.com/scobo/designs

36 (edited by carl_m1968 2014-11-19 08:34:13)

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

dudad.net wrote:

ok cool makes sense. sorry it took so long to reply, i drive a truck during the week so i stop here n there to check on my laptop. i usually have my first layer at .35 and my clearance at .28, seems to work ok and i've been using extra strength glue stick and have tried kapton tape but not painters tape yet so ill give it a shot but i am printing a part that pretty much covers half of the bed. some times i get a little warpage on the edges. well gotta crash for a few hrs but if you've got any other advice ill check in a few hrs and thanks a ton for all the help so far


You really need some sort of method to cool the entire layer as it is printed that keeping the entire print for the most part at bed temp. You need to figure out a way to add a fan to your extruder so it blows down on the print as it is printed.

Warping is caused by uneven cooling. On a large print the outside cools faster so based on thermal expansion the cooler area will be pushed away from the hotter area so it makes the edges and corners curl up since they are connected and cannot expand outward as well like the force is trying to make them do. To defeat that you either have to keep the entire print warm which the bed helps but does not do well enough as the print gets thicker.

So we go with the opposite approach and cool the entire layer as it is printed thus keeping the print at a uniform temp. You might think this is counter productive to bonding to a previous layer. It does not however cause any real difference in the bond. As the hot layer lays down it is hot enough to still melt into and bond to the previous layer even if the layer is cool.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

37

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

thanks again carl. i know your not on right now but thanks anyway. i actually have a new extruder assembly coming from xyz so i can use the fan from my old one and fab an easy mount to the mount for the one thats already on the assembly and point it down at an angle to blow directly on the extruder nozzle so it cools as it prints. im a pretty good fabricator, after all i own a davinci printer so id have to be lol and i love trying different things to make it work better. the definition of insanity is trying the same thing over and over and expecting different results and this printer hasn't made me crazy yet. thanks again

38

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

I ordered these from Amazon for $18.45 (free shipping)
10 Pack: 8" x 8" x 2mil 3DXTech Polyimide Tape Sheets Kapton for 3D Printer Platforms. Polyimide Tape offers an excellent print surface for 3D Printer Platforms. The polyimide tape is 2mil thick (0.05mm) with Silicone Adhesive and a PET release liner. This tape provides a smooth heat-resistant surface that easily removes once you have finished your print. Polyimide Tape offers excellent electrical insulation, high temperature resistance, and high voltage resistance. Suitable for use on Makerbot Replicator, Ultimaker, Prinrbot, Reprap, Mendel, Prusa, Up! Printers, Solidoodle as well as most other 3D Printers.

I will update this post after trying these out.....

39

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Dutch88 wrote:

I ordered these from Amazon for $18.45 (free shipping)
10 Pack: 8" x 8" x 2mil 3DXTech Polyimide Tape Sheets Kapton for 3D Printer Platforms. Polyimide Tape offers an excellent print surface for 3D Printer Platforms. The polyimide tape is 2mil thick (0.05mm) with Silicone Adhesive and a PET release liner. This tape provides a smooth heat-resistant surface that easily removes once you have finished your print. Polyimide Tape offers excellent electrical insulation, high temperature resistance, and high voltage resistance. Suitable for use on Makerbot Replicator, Ultimaker, Prinrbot, Reprap, Mendel, Prusa, Up! Printers, Solidoodle as well as most other 3D Printers.

I will update this post after trying these out.....

Sections that large will be very hard to place without wrinkles and bubbles. Next time you should just buy two inch wide rolls. Much easier to work with and the seams are so thin it does not matter.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

40

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Thanks for the write up. I read this before I started my first print and now on my 5th print (like 8 hours in) I see I chipped the glass. I waited for the printer to say it was down cooling and removed my item and now I have a nice little canyon in my glass. I'll order a new glass bed from xyz when their shopping cart starts working again and start investigating where I can get some thin glass to put on top.

41

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

I also had a small dent or chip in my heated bed. I have always been careful and always waited for the thing to cool down to room temperature. Actually the chip isn't even in a spot where I usually have anything printed at.

So, since I couldn't order one from their web site, I decided to use JB-Weld. You can get it at a hardware store or on line. I used the original kind - they have different versions. I used it because it is good up to 550 'C. For those who don't know, JB-Weld is an epoxy with iron mixed in. It dries to a grey colour but for a small chip it will self level and is smooth. I mixed it up on a piece of paper and then using a tooth pick, I filled in the chip and set the bed to auto warm (in the printer's settings) and left it over night.

Printing on top of the repair is fine - no problems.

42

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Dutch88 wrote:

I ordered these from Amazon for $18.45 (free shipping)
10 Pack: 8" x 8" x 2mil 3DXTech Polyimide Tape Sheets Kapton for 3D Printer Platforms. Polyimide Tape offers an excellent print surface for 3D Printer Platforms. The polyimide tape is 2mil thick (0.05mm) with Silicone Adhesive and a PET release liner. This tape provides a smooth heat-resistant surface that easily removes once you have finished your print. Polyimide Tape offers excellent electrical insulation, high temperature resistance, and high voltage resistance. Suitable for use on Makerbot Replicator, Ultimaker, Prinrbot, Reprap, Mendel, Prusa, Up! Printers, Solidoodle as well as most other 3D Printers.

I will update this post after trying these out.....

These have saved all sticking problems and adhesion problems.....They are hard to put on if you try to stick them on dry....if you clean the glass on your bed...spritz a little water on the bed...the Kapton tape squares slide nicely around and needed no trimming. I them heated the bed (by submitting a job) and slowly worked the air bubbles and water out with a credit card. After it got to 90C all the water was gone...I tested several prints and, once cooled, there is nothing to releasing them and revealing the nice glassy finish. I'd give this item a thumbs up for the DaVinci 1.0..

43

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

hey question would aluminum foil be safe to put on top of the plat instead of letting it print right on top of the glass?

44

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

The local "expert" here has one and says AquaNet hairspray works much better than the glue stick. The prints stick good but once they cool off they pop right off without the chance of breaking the glass.

45

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

jamesarmstrong3 wrote:

The local "expert" here has one and says AquaNet hairspray works much better than the glue stick. The prints stick good but once they cool off they pop right off without the chance of breaking the glass.

The issue with hairspray is that unless you use secondary glass sheets you have a hard time keeping over spray from getting on everything inside the printer. That stuff builds up after a while and collects dirt and debris. I was thinking of making a cardboard box that would just cover the bed so i could try hairspray without getting it on everything else in the printer.

I have actually been using Elmers glue sticks the last few days with some very good results. They stick very well when hot and pop right off once at room temp. Thats the key, don't be impatient. Wait for the bed to cool to room temp.

Printing since 2009 and still love it!
Anycubic 4MAX best $225 ever invested.
Voxelabs Proxima SLA. 6 inch 2k Mono LCD.
Anycubic Predator, massive Delta machine. 450 x 370 print envelope.

46

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Used the uhu glue stick and then wetted it, smoothing it out better on the bed.
Still early experimental. I think the few major sticking events were due to poor glue spreading.

Does an extra layer of bed glass get in the way? The initial extruded positioning is close.

47 (edited by pricecg44 2014-12-21 02:58:53)

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

The da Vinci printer was half to a third the cost of the other brand in the local stationary warehouse shops. The filament cartridges given 600g vs 1000g offerings and the nz dollar are not too off the going rate.

This printer was a 3d starter for me, the DIY stuff is not a lot less and the others are prohibitive price wise. Perhaps the printers will be half the current cost of the da Vinci (ie a sixth of the initial makerbot etc startup offerings in a year or two. The 'what's in the box' comparison with ink or laser printers is very interesting... Maybe two extra steppers, hence a mature market price point is 1.5 x inkjets.

The original poster alluded to crap tech. Can he give some specific comparisons eg what is the usual bed platform setup and why is the Chinese version is so bad?

48

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

So I just wanted to share that after getting my chip in my glass I started using masking tape (frogtape brand masking tape to be exact) and although I'm now the proud owner of two spare printing beds I haven't bothered to change it out yet.  The masking tape has been working wonders for me.  I figure I'll keep using the masking tape until I have this thing mastered and then venture to change the bed and still use masking tape after that.

The tape works great. I put down 4 strips, use an xacto knife to get the edges clean and then print. I tend to replace the two middle strips after every or every other print and the two outside strips every few prints.  Even though I have a nice chip in my glass the tape goes over smooth and I still manage to get a smooth service to print off of.

49 (edited by darcwarrior 2015-02-17 02:29:19)

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

Two days of printing on the naked bed at 110c with no glue and I just joined the chipped glass club sad Its about 2mm square, off to one side. Looks like i am going back to painters tape.I had left the print overnight, so it was not due to pulling off hot. This stinks,  I just got the bed perfectly level so that i need nothing for the prints to stick. Oh well, lesson learned.

50 (edited by jnadke 2015-02-17 17:42:56)

Re: Protecting your bed BEFORE it cracks, and alternatives to glue stick

darcwarrior wrote:

Two days of printing on the naked bed at 110c with no glue and I just joined the chipped glass club sad Its about 2mm square, off to one side. Looks like i am going back to painters tape.I had left the print overnight, so it was not due to pulling off hot. This stinks,  I just got the bed perfectly level so that i need nothing for the prints to stick. Oh well, lesson learned.

Ouch, that really sucks.  I feel for ya man.

I hate the glue stick because it always comes off clumpy and doesn't provide a level surface.


As I mentioned in a different thread, I like mixing Elmer's Glue All with Water (1 part glue to 8-10 parts water).  I then smear it on for a "frosted glass" look.  The water evaporates as the bed heats up.

It creates a good breakaway layer, and provides excellent adhesion.  Sometimes the glue comes up on the bottom of the print, but better the glue than the glass!


I hate tape, because it has a significant thickness and requires re-calibrating the bed height.