Very cool. That is very groovy even, very .45mm 3d printed groovy. One small step, though one giant leap for your kind. I would like to try that too after fixing the printer. Try printing using less supports at the toe point or gradiently less, and that could work within the limitations of the physics involved of separation of the shoe to not cause the process to rip away materials from the shoe. Another consideration for if to make custom shoes, is 3d scanning the feet that shall step forward to walk miles in them if they are orthotically dimensionally accurate. A cheap matching flexible or multipart mold can be created if to want to pour the proper materials normally used in injection molding. Keep on rocking or walking as you roll.
It's really unfortunate that you can't print flexibles in the AMS. Might be worthwhile to get an IDEX printer now that there are "budget" options on the market, like the Snapmaker J1 or the SOVOL SV04.
Very cool. That is very groovy even, very .45mm 3d printed groovy. One small step, though one giant leap for your kind.
I would like to try that too after fixing the printer.
Try printing using less supports at the toe point or gradiently less, and that could work within the limitations of the physics involved of separation of the shoe to not cause the process to rip away materials from the shoe.
Another consideration for if to make custom shoes, is 3d scanning the feet that shall step forward to walk miles in them if they are orthotically dimensionally accurate.
A cheap matching flexible or multipart mold can be created if to want to pour the proper materials normally used in injection molding.
Keep on rocking or walking as you roll.
What is a good filament for a shoe outsole? I am only interested in printing and outsole and do the rest in fabric x)
at the moment, all I've tried is TPU. will try other stuff later
@@3DShoemakeryeah but there are different TPU filament with different shore. Have you found a favorite for outsoles?
@@lisagren No... not yet, mostly been using just 95A, but clearly softer would be better
@@3DShoemaker oh ok! I will buy some different filaments and try around
It's really unfortunate that you can't print flexibles in the AMS. Might be worthwhile to get an IDEX printer now that there are "budget" options on the market, like the Snapmaker J1 or the SOVOL SV04.
I've heard there are some flexibles that might work. This is something I'm going to test soon.
@@3DShoemakeryes they do. I got overture high speed to work, priline black also reputedly works, and harder flexibles are supported
I haven't had any luck with overture high speed... will have to try priline at some point@@Tom--Ace
Are you gonna make a updated design out of curiosity?
Yes, though likely not until after the summer...
Can you make an actual video like step by step?? That would be really helpful 🤓
Gonna make a new type, probably in a couple months or so, will try to be more detailed
I want this program I'm from Lebanon, I work as a shoe modelist , how do I get it?
Please see here: 3dshoemaker.com/3dshoemaker-shoe-last-and-component-design-software/
what are those
Damn you really gottem
Why did you go with 95A?
Wouldn’t 70A work better?
It's what I had on hand, and it's easier to print.
Can a size 13 fit 235x235x240? :D