Glass Type - Heated Beds December 13, 2013 12:49AM |
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Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds December 13, 2013 09:02PM |
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Quote
anwe79
I'm using a 3 mm thick mirror cut to size. Works really well for PLA at 65 degrees (iirc) and ABS at 125 (coated with diluted PVA glue for ABS, no coating needed for PLA). Never had any cracking issues, even with some rough head crashes.
There is a hypothesis about the mirror reflecting heat back up from the part itself, but not so sure if there is a real difference compared to plain glass. It's dead flat though, any unevenness would distort the mirror image. I think finding a flatter bed than a mirror would be challenging.
I suppose even heating is important for the crack resilience. I use a thin aluminium sheet smeared with heatsink paste directly on the back of the mirror. Kapton heater attached to the bottom of the sheet.
/Andreas
Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds December 14, 2013 02:42AM |
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Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds January 31, 2014 04:28PM |
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Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds January 31, 2014 05:23PM |
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Most Pyrex that's made in the US hasn't been made of borosilicate glass since most of the industry switched sometime in the 80s, instead using cheaper and slightly less strong soda lime glass. And it's definitely been the case for all Pyrex since at least 1998 when World Kitchen bought the name Pyrex from Corning.Quote
dissidence
borosilicate (aka pyrex) was made to be much more shock tolerent than normal glass, it is the type of glass used in cook wear and i think a good chunk of lab glass.
Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds January 31, 2014 07:00PM |
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Re: Glass Type - Heated Beds February 01, 2014 09:09PM |
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