Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 07:34AM |
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 07:46AM |
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 09:30AM |
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 02:24PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 977 |
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dbrewski
Axial fans don't like back pressure. They work great when the can push the air freely, but fan ducts that restrict the airflow tend to reduce the ability of the axial fan to push air through.
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 02:27PM |
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 02:35PM |
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Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 02:49PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 977 |
Quote
691175002
Do you find that designs which blow air from only one direction produce slightly different results depending on geometry of the part being printed or the direction in which the extruder is moving?
Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 03:28PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 41 |
Quote
AndrewBCN
Quote
dbrewski
Axial fans don't like back pressure. They work great when the can push the air freely, but fan ducts that restrict the airflow tend to reduce the ability of the axial fan to push air through.
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That is 100% correct. However, since I am the designer of some of the fan ducts janpenguin has posted above, I would like to add a few remarks about how they were designed and the amount of air that they manage to push with a 40mm fan. BTW, you can find these fan designs on Thingiverse, and they include the OpenSCAD source so anybody can modify them and experiment with the shape, size of outlet, etc.
See here: [www.thingiverse.com]
My first remark is that these are layer fans, used for printing PLA and avoiding stringing, enabling the printing of overhangs and bridges, etc.
So what you really want is to cool the PLA as it comes out of the extruder and latest printed layer of the object itself, but in fact the area that you want to cool down is very small, so it does not take a lot of air to effectively get the desired result. However, what you really, really want is to come very close to the tip of the nozzle, as shown in this picture:
In my experience, a cheap ($1) 40mm axial fan with a properly designed fan duct that does not restrict air flow, correctly pointed to the tip of the nozzle, can be run at between 70% and 90% of its top speed (hence the PWM control and the options in the slicer software to control fan speed), and you can get perfect results.
Note that all the above only applies to PLA, not to ABS. I have not tested other types of filament yet.
I have even had people complaining that the air flow was excessive, and I had to explain to them that they had to connect the fan to the PWM D9 output of the RAMPS to get proper control of the airflow!
Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 08:45PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 977 |
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dbrewski
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Thank you for the detailed explanation. I'm hoping you can clear up my understanding on the exact purpose of cooling PLA. My understanding is that you want the current printed layer to be solid for the next layer to go on top. If the top layer is still soft, then the extruder doesn't have a solid surface to lay down plastic. I don't understand why cooling only at the tip is desired. Would it not be better to have air blowing across a greater area to remove more heat from the part?
Re: Temperature control of melted filament is the key of quality printing. June 25, 2015 09:08PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 189 |