Filament Storage Practices? February 13, 2015 07:54PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 13, 2015 08:09PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,171 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 13, 2015 08:37PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
If You Can Read, Thank A Teacher. If You Can Read It In English, Thank A Veteran That's what you do in a herd: you look out for each other. - Manny from Ice Age |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 14, 2015 10:45AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 903 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 14, 2015 08:14PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 52 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 14, 2015 09:07PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
Thanks for the 3DXtech link. Added it to my printer URL list. Been lookin for more filament suppliers.Quote
vreihen
I've seen a few entries on Thingiverse where people have installed small (25W) light bulbs into the aforementioned 5 gallon buckets in lieu of desiccant. Don't know if I would leave it unattended.
I like Werner Berry's idea from YouTube. He uses a large Harbor Freight paint spraying vessel as a vacuum chamber to dry/store filament.
Personally, I'm thinking that 3DXtech's Zip-Loc mylar pouches with a desiccant pack may be the the most practical solution yet:
http://www.3dxtech.com/5-pack-xl-ziploc-mylar-pouch/
I have several spools of factory-sealed filament that I'm afraid to open until I need them, and am hesitant to open my 5-gallon bucket to take out filament due to letting in more moisture. For my own comfort, I may be ordering some of those mylar Zip-Loc bags with my next filament order from 3DXtech.....
Thanks for that list. That is the exact info I was craving. Is not PLA also hygroscopic?Quote
Qcks_
Ehhh.... I can name the polymers that are going to be most problematic.
Nylon, PET, PMMA, and Polycarbonate, PEG, and polyacrylates.
I've not heard of wide spread use of PEG, PET, PMMA, or polyacrylates, but PET is probably going to happen, and PEG and Polyacrylates are all water soluble plastics. Making their eventual use as a filament very likely because they can be used as a support material that dissolves with water.
If You Can Read, Thank A Teacher. If You Can Read It In English, Thank A Veteran That's what you do in a herd: you look out for each other. - Manny from Ice Age |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 14, 2015 10:39PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 52 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 15, 2015 08:34AM |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 16, 2015 03:50PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
Quote
Qcks_
Modifying the 5 gallon bucket is easy:
You need a drill, a hot glue gun, a hole saw attachment for the drill (around 3/4 inch... maybe a little bigger), a regular flat head screw driver, a pair of scissors, and a vaccum seal bag from walmart (or other big box store).
Cut the bag down so that you are only dealing with the vaccum seal. Pry apart the vaccum seal. cut hole in lid, snap seal back together around hole and apply hot glue.
If you think it needs more, add some silica beads to absorb moisture.
If You Can Read, Thank A Teacher. If You Can Read It In English, Thank A Veteran That's what you do in a herd: you look out for each other. - Manny from Ice Age |
New to 3D printing, not new to 3D or tinkering. LulzBot Taz 5 Generic Chinese 50w 300x500 Laser Cutter/Engraver (Ebay:171066211150) Corel X7, Photoshop CS6, Lightroom 4, Modo, Hexagon, Bryce, Poser |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 16, 2015 06:44PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,171 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 17, 2015 01:00AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 52 |
Quote
Wolfie
Quote
Qcks_
Modifying the 5 gallon bucket is easy:
You need a drill, a hot glue gun, a hole saw attachment for the drill (around 3/4 inch... maybe a little bigger), a regular flat head screw driver, a pair of scissors, and a vaccum seal bag from walmart (or other big box store).
Cut the bag down so that you are only dealing with the vaccum seal. Pry apart the vaccum seal. cut hole in lid, snap seal back together around hole and apply hot glue.
If you think it needs more, add some silica beads to absorb moisture.
I am dubious of that whole thing to be honest. What you are doing to the bucket is virtually pointless and even could be detrimental.
Even a strong vacuum cleaner wll only pull about 3psi of vacuum. I mean really, if you are lucky you are only reducing the pressure inside that bucket by around 20%, if that. That reduction will do nothing to remove moisture inside the bucket. If you think for a minute you are removing all the air (or even a majority of it) from the bucket like it does from the bag, um, you are very mistaken. Your modified bucket and the storage bag operate on vastly different concepts.
If you tried to remove all the air (ie, full vacuum, 14.7psi down to 0psi), that thing would probably fold like a empty soda can long before you got there. If you were able, take an empty bucket, slap a lid on it and submerge it down to about 33ft in salt water. Of course you would have to weight it down with about 45-50# of weight to get it to sink (displacement of 5-6gal of salt water). Odds are, it would fold long before you got it to 33'.
At 33' (14.7psi) or one atmosphere, there would be nearly 1600# of pressure on the LID ALONE. And the sides and bottom account for probably 5x that. Even half way down, you are looking at nearly 800# on the lid. Unless you are working with extremely robust buckets, I would doubt they could support more than 300-400 lb before beginning to stress.
You would be far better off putting the spools in the bags and pulling a vacuum on those. They are not rigid and can collapse and thus evacuate a majority of the air inside. The bucket can't collapse (well not at these pressures anyway) because its ridged and thus your vacuum removes very little of the air.
In fact pulling a vacuum might even contribute to the problem. If the lid seal is not perfect air will be forced into the bucket (since the surrounding air is at a higher pressure) and bring humidity with it. You would be better off slightly pressurizing(1psi is all it would take) the bucket so outside air couldn't enter at all..
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 21, 2015 12:37PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 25 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 22, 2015 01:16AM |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 23, 2015 12:25PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 553 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 24, 2015 11:20AM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
Quote
Qcks_
And so we're clear, I mean those little packets of hardened, silica that's in medicine bottles and other stuff they want kept dry, not bits of silicone caulk that you've ripped to shreds.
Edit: Also... i was not talking about a industrial vacuum pump. i was talking about a bag, produced by ziplock, for use with a household vacuum cleaner.
Quote
tjb1
I use 5 gallon buckets with Gamma Seal lids (Link) which can be purchased at Lowes/Home Depot under alternative names and Amazon/U-Line and I place Eva-Dry 333 (Link) rechargeable dessicant packs in each bucket. The dessicant packs can be bought at the same places mentioned before. Expect to have around $30 per setup for the bucket, lid, and dessicant pack.
Edit: I think I can only get around 4 - 1kg spools per bucket, may be worthwhile to find 7 gallon buckets if you can.
If You Can Read, Thank A Teacher. If You Can Read It In English, Thank A Veteran That's what you do in a herd: you look out for each other. - Manny from Ice Age |
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Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 27, 2015 12:08AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 73 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? February 27, 2015 03:45PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 20 |
If You Can Read, Thank A Teacher. If You Can Read It In English, Thank A Veteran That's what you do in a herd: you look out for each other. - Manny from Ice Age |
New to 3D printing, not new to 3D or tinkering. LulzBot Taz 5 Generic Chinese 50w 300x500 Laser Cutter/Engraver (Ebay:171066211150) Corel X7, Photoshop CS6, Lightroom 4, Modo, Hexagon, Bryce, Poser |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? July 15, 2015 10:15AM |
Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 4 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? July 15, 2015 02:17PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 288 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? July 15, 2015 05:40PM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 73 |
Quote
Austmannchemie
Hey Donald,
how is your experience with the ziploc bags? Are they tight? I think it's a good idea. No supplier is offering its products in ziploc bags?
Re: Filament Storage Practices? July 21, 2015 03:35PM |
Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 82 |
Re: Filament Storage Practices? July 23, 2015 02:57AM |
Registered: 9 years ago Posts: 169 |