I like the look of that Siraya Tech Fast Smokey Gray. I have only used the Siraya Tech Fast Gray. I just got a second bottle, I should have got the Smokey Gray. Oh well. I guess I'll just have to use it up to get more. I want to try adding some Siraya Tech Tenacious to my Fast. It's supposed to make it less brittle.
I've worked on a lot of different types of products over the years from industrial machines made of steel weldments to sheet metal products, but mostly I've worked on Plastic parts. At work we have two Form 2 printers and several FDM printers. A few years back my employer had a 3D systems projet HD 3000. That printer was great, but very expensive. It used wax as a support material that left no marks after the wax was melted away. It's amazing that the Mono X printer I have now can produce parts very close to the same quality (not quite, but close) to what that 50K industrial printer was doing 15ish years ago.
Excellent comparison. Thank you!
This 0:37 alone makes the video.
Just that sheet
I like the look of that Siraya Tech Fast Smokey Gray. I have only used the Siraya Tech Fast Gray. I just got a second bottle, I should have got the Smokey Gray. Oh well. I guess I'll just have to use it up to get more. I want to try adding some Siraya Tech Tenacious to my Fast. It's supposed to make it less brittle.
I haven't played with any tenacious mixing but I suspect I will sometime down the road. I hope you'll post your results.
I'd be interested in knowing what kind of mechanical parts you make. I pretty much only do functional & mechanical parts as well.
I've worked on a lot of different types of products over the years from industrial machines made of steel weldments to sheet metal products, but mostly I've worked on Plastic parts. At work we have two Form 2 printers and several FDM printers. A few years back my employer had a 3D systems projet HD 3000. That printer was great, but very expensive. It used wax as a support material that left no marks after the wax was melted away. It's amazing that the Mono X printer I have now can produce parts very close to the same quality (not quite, but close) to what that 50K industrial printer was doing 15ish years ago.