Resin Printing IS Killing You..!

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  • Опубліковано 25 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @RafS-vd3mz
    @RafS-vd3mz Рік тому +1657

    The safety aspect of 3D printing needs to be talked about more, thank you for your contribution.

    • @Ballziggler
      @Ballziggler Рік тому +76

      Too many people have access to this product and aren't given the right information on this. I was one of them, I got a Resin printer as a gift, I had not looked into the dangers before I started printing in my house, in the living room, during the winter, with no windows open. This absolutely needs to be talked about with lower class folks who don't have the option to build a shed or live in apartments/condo's. It took this video almost 2 years later to realize I may have caused toxicity to my entire family.

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine Рік тому +4

      @@Ballziggler Yeah, these things aren't, like, super dangerous so long as they're used properly i.e. wear protection, use in a well ventilated space. But they do out gas hazardous compounds that can be toxic in a confined area.

    • @Zane-It
      @Zane-It Рік тому +2

      Safety 3rd

    • @Burbund
      @Burbund Рік тому

      Are fdl printers safer?

    • @leblon712
      @leblon712 Рік тому +21

      I feel cheated. I bought a resin printer and I was pretty excited about it until I started reading about the safety issues and all the work it requires to clean and dispose.
      I have my setup in the basement room. And it will be hard to ventilate and keep a good temperature
      I wish companies would tell buyers up front how dangerous and costly it really is, they make it sound so easy and safe.
      I might just sell my whole rig.

  • @bebopsplat1347
    @bebopsplat1347 Рік тому +618

    I refused to use my resin printer until I build an airtight enclosure that vents to the outside. Everyone told me it was overkill, but now I'm glad I did

    • @William_Van_Landingham_III
      @William_Van_Landingham_III Рік тому +20

      I'm with you on that. I'll also be investing in an air quality sensor.

    • @djangofett4879
      @djangofett4879 Рік тому +30

      if its airtight, how is it going to vent any air through it?

    • @Ang3lUki
      @Ang3lUki Рік тому +7

      Good on you! I feel like there are a lot of creators out there who gloss over or understate the dangers of resin printing.

    • @samuraijackoff5354
      @samuraijackoff5354 Рік тому

      @@djangofett4879
      There is a tube that leads outside, mine is to a window. The tube is sealed tight on both sides with a mesh.

    • @Zanroff
      @Zanroff Рік тому +1

      I'm thinking about getting into resin printing. What part(s) of the process needs venting?

  • @wimwiddershins
    @wimwiddershins Рік тому +2138

    The thing about these resins is, they were designed to solve an engineering problem, not to be non-toxic.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Рік тому +227

      Yes, and nobody's talking about it? The orientation class I took covering resin 3d printing was pretty clear about the fact that the resin and the fumes are dangerous and you should do things like wear gloves and use ventilation to keep the air clear of fumes.
      And even without that, the smell is bad enough to give a really clear indication that this probably isn't something that you want to breathe in.

    • @TOCZEKX
      @TOCZEKX Рік тому +66

      @@SmallSpoonBrigade At work we have form 3L and when we bought it it was advise to use ABEK P3 filters and mask when changing resin in tank etc. and the most important when sanding or cutting resin prints - as dust is toxic

    • @TuxraGamer
      @TuxraGamer Рік тому +26

      ​@@SmallSpoonBrigade This is correct, although, I've been having a hard timing finding good research about *how* bad they actually are.

    • @7elemente
      @7elemente Рік тому

      @@TOCZEKX inded, ABEK P3 is the best degree of protection you can have for mask filters + very good air ventilation, we have this at work too =)

    • @chrissinclair4442
      @chrissinclair4442 Рік тому +21

      Yeah, can't wait for it come to light about cancer or other health risks, and dental resins.

  • @SierraWater
    @SierraWater Рік тому +403

    Particulate matter from liquid resin or ultra fine particles can be in the 100 nanometer size. This means you would need to utilize both a HEPA + activated carbon filter to trap both UFPs and VOCs. I have been in the thermoplastic and filtration industry for 40 years.. Everyone’s constitution is different, but safety should always be a significant variable in determining whether to work in certain environments.

    • @AnimatorJuusoz
      @AnimatorJuusoz Рік тому +11

      Exactly my thoughts. I was wondering why he was not mentioning anything about HEPA filters. You need both HEPA and carbon to properly filter air.

    • @u563rick6
      @u563rick6 Рік тому

      @@dinfernosevI looked up the device it is electrochemical!

    • @revilosmoth1101
      @revilosmoth1101 Рік тому +15

      "SLA 3D printers produce very little PM, even during the post-processing steps of washing and curing. A Chemical Insights study found that SLA particle emissions remain at or below background ambient particle concentrations."

    • @Mello_me
      @Mello_me 10 місяців тому +1

      do enclosures work?

    • @uncledeadhead3674
      @uncledeadhead3674 10 місяців тому +10

      in order to be that small it would have to be either boiled or blown in strands intot he air, or, sanded, so if you are pouring resin its impossible for you to get aliquid to 100 nanometer size in the air. you should know this, but you left that out to make people more concerned.

  • @tiobridge841
    @tiobridge841 Рік тому +263

    Don't feel bad about making a safety warning, it's important to do so!

  • @arowsmitt7693
    @arowsmitt7693 Рік тому +142

    More people new to the hobby NEED to see stuff like this. Everyone should know the proper saftey measures, and eventually some more communication from 3d printer/resin companies on the risks involved.

    • @ba_charles
      @ba_charles 8 місяців тому +2

      this stuff has been used in factories for over forty years. if there were even mild risks (like with bpa) you would have heard of them by now

    • @joeperk24
      @joeperk24 5 місяців тому

      New to the hobby here. Can confirm. Acquiring isolation cabinet with a fan sufficient to suck all these nasties and send them out of my home. Getting a TVOC monitor too. Gotta make sure it's actually working.

    • @IPrint3dMinis
      @IPrint3dMinis 5 місяців тому +1

      @@ba_charles There are risks, there always is with stuff like this. It is a manufacturing method for home use, but no one said it is 100% safe either. The chemicals both used to print and post process have dangers. IPA is just as dangerous as the resins themselves, and the fumes from that are even worse when combining with cleaning the resins and such. Plus add heat to that and it makes it even worse, since it is usually hot in the workshop.

  • @BunkerSquirrel
    @BunkerSquirrel Рік тому +1025

    When I was in college, our robotics lab got a huge grant and one of the things we were excited to buy and use was a resin printer. Unfortunately, our facilities coordinator didn’t allow us to use it because we didn’t have a fume hood. We are a bit miffed and thought she was being ridiculous. Turns out she made the right call
    Edit: I'm loving these goofy aaa suggestions on how we could've circumvented this. Like honestly you even suggesting them is proof they didn't work for you.

    • @TheEtbetween
      @TheEtbetween Рік тому +47

      No she didn’t! Just open windows! Also you could use a exhaust fan. This Guy is not good at understanding chemistry! Printing killing you is click bate

    • @BunkerSquirrel
      @BunkerSquirrel Рік тому +159

      @@TheEtbetween No she really didn’t. FDM plastics are fairly safe so we were allowed to use that. SLA material is extremely toxic. “Just opening a window” *might* work in a home setting but is unacceptable in a lab.

    • @TheEtbetween
      @TheEtbetween Рік тому +14

      @@BunkerSquirrel Did she read the MSDS? We can’t determine something toxic just by smell!!

    • @BryceGoodson
      @BryceGoodson Рік тому +90

      ​​@@TheEtbetweenyou can just be around resin fumes and feel sick relatively quickly. That's all the evidence I'll ever need.

    • @paladro
      @paladro Рік тому +41

      @@TheEtbetween safety first, no?

  • @NoeticSystem
    @NoeticSystem Рік тому +32

    I did one single print without anything beyond having a fan blow into the room and opening a window for cross-ventilation. That one print was all it took for me to realize that the fumes coming off resin printers, the little drips of uncured resin on your workbench, and the smell from gloves and cleaning towels covered in uncured resin are totally unacceptable to have in your bedroom. My lungs actually hurt every time I took the cover off the machine. This was with an Anycubic Photon with their high-speed resin. I cleared out the walk-in closet to use as a resin print station and put a big ALORAIR air purifier in there, and I got a North half-face mask and some cartridges, like what I used when painting with two-part polyurethane on ship hulls. People should not be breathing this stuff casually or sitting next to these things while they're in operation, without either a fume hood or a very powerful, hospital-grade VOC-removing air purifier, like an IQAir. They should also be wearing half-face P100 respirators with vapor cartridges any time they're working with uncured resin, transferring the material into and out of the tank on the printer, et cetera. I have been exposed to everything on the planet. Diesel fumes and vapor, xylene, acetone, paint, paint stripper, you name it. UV resin is uniquely nauseating, insidious stuff, and people should not be so casual about exposing themselves to it.

    • @billdecompsa4705
      @billdecompsa4705 5 місяців тому +4

      I just made the bedroom mistake 🤦‍♂️

  • @tyotee4361
    @tyotee4361 Рік тому +344

    Thank you for bringing attention to this! However seeing your printing room it's no surprise the levels are so high, it's basically airtight with no ventilation at all. Removing the tape from the windows and opening the door is an excellent first step. Even FDM printing in a room like that would be quite toxic.

    • @K8Stuff
      @K8Stuff Рік тому +181

      I was thinking that. Heck in a room like that a taco fart can be lethal ...

    • @AshT8524
      @AshT8524 Рік тому +12

      @K8Stuff Lmao 😂🤣

    • @paladro
      @paladro Рік тому +9

      keep sealed, add some ventilation ports... pretty simple.

    • @InfernusdomniAZ
      @InfernusdomniAZ Рік тому +34

      Ventilation also removes heat which he is very concerned about. Thats why the room is all sealed up. It's why he got the heat exchanger.

    • @pittpenguin1236
      @pittpenguin1236 Рік тому +15

      he can have it heated with a in printer heater and still have a vent in that fan I have one in my set u and my air quality alot better this guy is acting really dumb in a sealed room with resin

  • @x3tc1
    @x3tc1 Рік тому +35

    One thing you should definitely check when meassuring air quality is if you have recently used IPA or other types of alcohol.
    Du to their chemical make up they get cross-detected by many HCHO sensors and quite a bunch of TVOC sensors aren't calibrated for them.
    Best case you have absurdly high reading.
    Worst case they permanently desensitize your sensor.
    I have a large air purifier with carbon and HEPA filter in my workshop and when I print my TVOC and HCHO levels stay withing living room limits (0,08 for HCHO). But as soon as I as much as open a bottle of IPA those readings go through the roof and stay there for a long time despite the air purifier and at least one additional carbon filter in the printer.
    Only opening a window for an hour or so helps. Even used wipes with some cleaning alcohol on them still mess with your sensors.

    • @blackdeath099
      @blackdeath099 11 місяців тому +14

      This is my issue with this video. Good intention, but he seems to not be familiar about how to do an actual testing protocol.

    • @TechSavyMom
      @TechSavyMom 4 місяці тому +2

      Yes this is exactly what happens for me, printing, barely changes anything. Open the IPA, and red zone.

  • @jman44
    @jman44 Рік тому +424

    I had a feeling these carbon filters only removed smells. That's why I made a cabinet for my printer that vents outdoors.

    • @mechminded2207
      @mechminded2207 Рік тому +5

      Correct.

    • @mandalorianknight7002
      @mandalorianknight7002 Рік тому +45

      Yup, they’re advertised that way too. However your average consumer will think no smell equals safe. It’s similar to the water washable resin.

    • @kdeuler
      @kdeuler Рік тому +3

      Yes, I was just going to suggest this.

    • @HCG
      @HCG Рік тому +30

      No. They don’t just remove smells, that’s not how activated carbon works. It removes most VOCs and harmful gases

    • @enginerdy
      @enginerdy Рік тому +19

      @@HCGyeah.. I think what is going on is that for it to really smell, the concentration is _waaay_ over 10 mg/m3 and it’s knocking it down without getting it to a “safe” level

  • @Mavranel
    @Mavranel Рік тому +33

    Thanks for this. Was thinking about getting into Resin Printing, but it's clear I need to put more thought into how I'm going to stay safe while doing it.

  • @janezpetergrom4731
    @janezpetergrom4731 Рік тому +16

    Great video. Nobody speaks about this. I had huge problems with my printing and nobody told me the resin was so toxic!! I have 3 printer running 24/7 in a separate room, but I can see this is not enough. I will install recuperator like you did! Thank you

  • @ChacUayabXoc
    @ChacUayabXoc Рік тому +29

    I was actually in the process of thinking about what kind of 3D-Printer I want to get. Resin is so tempting, because of the quality you can get in small scales. But I don't have an extra room to use this in and it would need to be in the room I sleep and live in. This makes me seriously rethink. So thanks for the warning.

    • @sandplasma
      @sandplasma 9 місяців тому +2

      You can hookup a vent directly from the printer exhaust to the window and have an extra carbon filter inside just in case.

  • @gagz9k
    @gagz9k Рік тому +107

    The PSA is super important. For an "average joe" using a cabinet or a closet with an extraction system could be more feasible of a project. Still time and space consuming, but more realistic than a room size conversion, and would work great for temp control!

    • @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus
      @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus Рік тому +2

      If you got a half bath in a house it could work from the sound of what you said

    • @bobobob1230
      @bobobob1230 10 місяців тому +2

      you know you have a good point, there's another closet/exhaust system project I had in mind here down in southern california too 🤔🤔🤔 I'm a little worried about Jonathan in this video though, like I feel like the real thing he needs to do is put in some HVAC exhaust fans going out of that room first and foremost... also what about a particulate respirator?Got one from painting the roof of my car, they're not super expensive

    • @wonderbread6100
      @wonderbread6100 8 місяців тому

      @@RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus I was told you do not want it in your bathing area either.

    • @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus
      @RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus 8 місяців тому

      @@wonderbread6100 half baths are just a can and sink and a vent

  • @TheLuggi84
    @TheLuggi84 Рік тому +40

    This video is definitely a must-watch. Especially for those people that use water-washable resin, touch it without any gloves and flush the used water down the drain. There has to be done way more to warn the customer base about the toxicity and harmful nature of any resin. Unfortunately there are a whole bunch of people out there that downplay the risks of resin exposure.

    • @Commodore22345
      @Commodore22345 8 місяців тому

      Because people like you have been crying wolf on the supposed dangers of resin since it became widely available about a decade or so ago, and there is no data to support the assertions you safety nuts are making. A decade is more than enough time for something to have popped up by now to corroborate your claims on how harmful resin can be, but there's nothing. No cancers, or other long term ailments have thus far been linked to normal exposure to resin that results from 3D printing.
      Now that's not saying the stuff is completely safe. Everyone understands there is certainly some danger. But that danger can be largely mitigated with just a little bit of common sense. Wear some gloves, make sure there's some airflow and don't drink the resin and you'll largely be fine.

    • @Pelasomma
      @Pelasomma 6 місяців тому +1

      Out of curiosity how should you dispose of the used water?

    • @TheLuggi84
      @TheLuggi84 5 місяців тому +3

      @@Pelasomma The same way you'd dispose of used IPA: Bring it to a place that is able to dispose it for you in a legal manner. Junk yards or such. Most do it for free if you bring just a couple litres.

    • @obtuseobserver
      @obtuseobserver 2 місяці тому +1

      I'm new to resin printing and was considering using the water washable resin to cut down exposure to IPA. Is Water Washable safer or more toxic?

    • @TheLuggi84
      @TheLuggi84 2 місяці тому +2

      @@obtuseobserver Neither, nor. It's the same. The only benefit of water-washable resin is that you safe money on ipa. That's it. It's as toxic as regular resin and must be hanled as such. That means that you have to dispose the used water at a junk yard or similar and can't pour it down the drain. Also, it's much more brittle. If you are looking to print miniatures for playing tabletops and such, get yourself an ABS-Like resin. ELEGOO and Sunlu are both great quality and pretty cheap.

  • @dkaustin98
    @dkaustin98 Рік тому +77

    I had thought about 3D resin printing, however I was not aware of the airborne toxins. Thanks for posting this video. Now I know.

    • @Marcus-xl9kr
      @Marcus-xl9kr Рік тому +3

      There are the filament printers that use spools of plastic that are way more office friendly than these little resin printers. Plus the filament printers are usually cheaper for a same sized printer than a resin printer

    • @drew4252
      @drew4252 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Marcus-xl9krhe knows

  • @Guttalaser
    @Guttalaser Рік тому +3

    Tons and tons of 3d printing videos about every technical p.o.v. (resolution, slicing, supporting, curing, cleaning, post-processing, painting.. etc...) and at the end the max safe hints are: wear a mask, eyes protection glasses and nitrile gloves!
    And now YOU Man!
    Thank you so much!

  • @MantisRay861
    @MantisRay861 Рік тому +7

    This is a big issue in other arts as well and often gets overlooked for a long time due to the absence of any immediate effect. Thank you for making this video! Remember that a window doesn't do much without a way for air to flow, like having the door cracked or another window open as well.
    Another option instead of the heat exchanger would be to wrap the printer in a thermal blanket, heated blanket perhaps. I think this would be a less expensive option.

  • @kornervoncuriem9048
    @kornervoncuriem9048 Рік тому +35

    After buying my first resin printer and doing more research, I'm realizing that the cheapest thing is the printer itself. There are many things that they don't tell you or that come fairly soon after you started. If someone had told me that apart from the printer, I need to set up a mini laboratory so that not only the prints come out well, but also to be sure I don't get poisoned by the fumes, maybe I would have thought twice before buying it, I'm not saying that I regret it, it's just that this type of information would be appreciated if it came in the manual XD.
    Thank you very much for the video, very valuable information, keep it up :D

    • @joeperk24
      @joeperk24 5 місяців тому

      Same. Now purchasing a metal cabinet and sealing every nook and cranny so the air gets sucked in and evacuated where I want. Buying one of these censors too. Any other things you think I should look out for in the coming months for maintenance or other issues you encountered?

  • @Allegheny500
    @Allegheny500 Рік тому +6

    Yeah, they don't mention this aspect other than the "use in a well ventilated area" warning, skipping over just how toxic the stuff is. Good information, thanks.

  • @flomojo2u
    @flomojo2u Рік тому +9

    Ok, there are a number of issues here. First, those cheap air quality/VOC meters are absolutely worthless! I bought a few different ones under $100USD, and they were a complete waste. I got really scared since one said there were lethal levels of CO in the room, only to find that it was some isopropyl alcohol that I had rubbed on my hands. The sensors in these cheap meters try and combine a bunch of things into a single device, and they are incredibly inaccurate, if not dangerous due to misleading info that could mask real issues. So I would never worry about the readings you get except as an indicator that something unusual is in the air, but never as a means of testing for safety!
    It's also important to be familiar with the material safety data sheets for the resin so you can find out what you're being exposed to, and at what levels are dangerous.
    As others have noted you've essentially built a sealed container with zero air flow through, so any fumes at all will be concentrated over time. It's no wonder you still saw problems the next day.
    Finally, you really need the right fan for filtering through media like activated carbon. The problem is that your average computer fan is optimized for high air flow at low back pressure, and you need one capable of working against constricted flow, such as a centripetal fan. Otherwise you'll see almost zero flow.

    • @herculeholmes504
      @herculeholmes504 Рік тому

      I wouldn't say that's a fault with the meter, more like a fault with the method.

    • @bencastor9207
      @bencastor9207 Місяць тому

      ​@@herculeholmes504 if the method is faulty then the meter is faulty...

  • @DarkAlkaiser
    @DarkAlkaiser Рік тому +75

    It's not like they are keeping this secret, they are very clear that you need to be doing this in a well ventilated space.

    • @pom791
      @pom791 2 місяці тому +3

      >well ventilated space
      hes already failed at that, what did he expect in a sealed shed? even if he wasnt printing doing any other activity in there would be miserable

  • @hellotouchbot
    @hellotouchbot Рік тому +5

    I use a 8x4 ft grow tent for my resin printers and cleaning. Its already got built in ducting so its real easy to basically make a walk in fume hood. I strongly recommend it!

  • @mattmackenzie4636
    @mattmackenzie4636 Рік тому +33

    I know I suffer from health anxiety and take precautions too far for some things but I see all these youtubers who are being soo cavalier with their attitudes towards resin printing. In fact I don't have a resin printer because honestly I am scared despite wanting to do so. I do wish I would see more youtubers like you giving out solid advice on safety. I appreciate this video a lot.

    • @vindik8or
      @vindik8or Рік тому +4

      I don't mean to minimise your anxiety, but I think one thing to keep in mind is that you will get pretty clear indications that you shouldn't continue with resin printing before you suffer serious health consequences. The rashes from sensitisation that Jonathan mentioned will be pretty obvious and will go away when you stop handling resin. Yes, it will be annoying to have to divest yourself of all your equipment and give up 3D printing, but consider that you're already currently in that situation just with more money. All of the precautions and PPE recommended in this video are feasible (except maybe the heat exchange), but you should be confident that the health effects of resin aren't going to sneak up on you and ruin your life. You will get clear warning signs before that happens.

    • @ty-wrap8184
      @ty-wrap8184 Рік тому +2

      I'm glad to know I'm not alone. I to suffer from health anxiety. My 3d printing setup in my basement would make many roll their eyes, but my UFP extraction setup i built cost 3x more than the prusa mini I bought, but it allows me to enjoy the hobby and still sleep at night without worrying.

    • @WGAJeremy
      @WGAJeremy Рік тому +2

      I watched some UA-camr once rubbing UNCURED UV RESIN all over a FDM printed part to smooth out layer lines WITH HIS BARE HANDS and then CURING it with a handheld UV lamp while still holding it with his bare hands. Complete insanity.

    • @mattmackenzie4636
      @mattmackenzie4636 Рік тому +1

      @vindik8or oh yeah, I've seen pictures of people with serious rashes. I always think a healthy level of concern over health and safety is beneficial and I am fully aware that my anxiety is often irrational, to rhe point where it hinders me from enjoying life and attempting things. My biggest concern is just how damn clumsy i am too, like if had a similar setup as Jonathan, I'd be fine but I always worry I'm going to knock something over, get it on me somehow and then I'd freak out. A bit of thought in set up and placement of items would mitigate that. Therapy has helped but I've been like this since childhood so changing my brains way of thinking takes some time. Though I appreciate your response. Sorry for the late reply.

    • @mattmackenzie4636
      @mattmackenzie4636 Рік тому +3

      @ty-wrap8184 exactly, I hope one day to be able to afford a decent setup to print all the many, many purchases I've made of STL's (I'd rather £8 for 5 items now than £15 for one of them later ha)
      I don't think people understand that just because something is now able to be used at home doesn't make it any safer. The resin being used is still the resin being used by industries and the same levels of safety are required, not always on the same scale, for a small garage room you probably don't need 10 massive extractors but you still need something.
      Same thing with cleaning products, if you even read the labels on some spray varnishes they require being outdoors and using respirators.
      The bug thing also is when I see people on UA-cam saying wear a mask guys and then sporting full beards. Like you now have no protection (unless you have those helmet ones). These particles are way smaller than the width of your beard hair, they are going to get through.

  • @randomnickify
    @randomnickify Рік тому +14

    Yes, this, I'm sick of youtubers talking about "bad" smell of printing. That "smell" is effing toxic :/

    • @jerkchickenblog
      @jerkchickenblog 2 місяці тому

      it's not the smell that's toxic. easy to get rid of the smell, not so with the poison

  • @enginepy
    @enginepy Рік тому +72

    The first year I was in resin printing it was affecting me. Lots of fumes and headaches and eye pain. Eventually I figured out my techniques and was much more safe and reduced how much I was breathing and touching. Also, switching to water washable resin made a huge difference

    • @ReallyBigBadAndy76
      @ReallyBigBadAndy76 Рік тому +12

      That’s because all of the irritation you describe is from the isopropanol, not from the resin.

    • @enginepy
      @enginepy Рік тому +5

      @@ReallyBigBadAndy76 I do agree that was a big one. I did also get a resin my eyes (from residue on my hands and often in little cuts on my fingers. I was just anxious and careless

    • @javaguru7141
      @javaguru7141 Рік тому +7

      Sure hope you're properly disposing of the water you're washing your resin with

    • @raconianmoon
      @raconianmoon Рік тому +17

      It should be noted that water washable resin is actually significantly more toxic than the isopropanol soluble stuff due to the fact that it's vastly more permeable into the body (humans are mostly water, after all). You also really, really need to make sure you're treating your waste water from the washing step like chemical waste. Photopolymer resin is apocalyptically bad for aquatic environments (the only way to tell if the amounts in a body of water are lethal to fish is to literally put fish in it and see if they die because the threshold is so small it can't be effectively measured). Additionally, wastewater treatment plants cannot properly treat resin-contaminated water, so improper disposal may unintentionally result in poisoning your own local water supply

    • @AlexM-iq3nh
      @AlexM-iq3nh Рік тому +4

      @Raconianmoon you have a source that states water washable is more toxic? I wash my water washable resin with alcohol still but I had read that this resin didn't have VOCs.

  • @anthonycochran6492
    @anthonycochran6492 9 місяців тому +6

    I get a kick out of videos like this. Rule #1 with resins of all types is "Only use in a well ventilated area." It says that on the packaging...but then everyone gets bent out of shape when circumventing the safety warning, then discover that it's created a dangerous situation.
    It's very simple:
    1. Read and follow ALL safety warning included with your product...or risk being the reason why they are there.

    • @drinmer1
      @drinmer1 3 місяці тому

      THANK YOU!! Finally someone with a working brain.

  • @BenSabersTV
    @BenSabersTV Рік тому +17

    All you need to do is wrap a heat belt round the vat / tank so you can control the resin temp to anything you want and then that allows you to install extractor fans one fan blowing in fresh air and the other very near the printers expelling the air. It's what I do and my air quality is fantastic and even in winter I can keep resin at any temp I like

    • @leblon712
      @leblon712 Рік тому +2

      Can you elaborate o more on your setup? And the heat belt?

    • @Pendragon-dnd
      @Pendragon-dnd Рік тому +1

      Yes seconding this is also like more clarification on the heat belt. It sounds useful

    • @Pendragon-dnd
      @Pendragon-dnd Рік тому +1

      @@leblon712just found something called a thermal vatband which regulates temperature for just the vat.

    • @BenSabersTV
      @BenSabersTV Рік тому

      Sorry I didn't see the replies, so around the tank you use what's called in eBay a "Brew Heat Belt Fermentation Belt Heating Beer Wine Cider Making Warming Heater" I use mine on a timer for early morning printing to bring things to temp which takes about 30 mins. For air quality I use one bathroom air fan blowing into the area and another opposite sucking air out and works like a dream. Hope that clarifies things better. When the belt is around the vat / tank the plastic printer cover just sits on top of the belt.

    • @BenSabersTV
      @BenSabersTV Рік тому

      @@Pendragon-dnd sounds exactly like what I use.

  • @KentHambrock
    @KentHambrock Рік тому +1

    This is brilliant, thanks for making sure more people know the dangers of resin printing and even showing a solution. I'm super tired of seeing people on youtube handling uncured prints with barehands and not wearing masks.

  • @timsmith8824
    @timsmith8824 Рік тому +4

    I decided to buy a meter and test this out myself. I have ran several tests. I have a 600 square foot shop. I run 2 Jupiter printers, 4 Saturn2, and 24 FDM printers in it. The highest reading I got was 3 and that was laying between a Jupiter and Saturn2 printing.

  • @pcliftonjr
    @pcliftonjr Рік тому +13

    Bottom line is you need ventilation and should be wearing gloves when using chemicals. This goes for Resin, Epoxy , CA glues, Polyurethane etc... You can get away with it "for a while", but as you said eventually it catches up with you. Sadly, I lot of people take safety for granted.

  • @BM-yy8db
    @BM-yy8db Рік тому +30

    I would absolutely love it if you did one like this for FDM printing. Just how toxic is PLA in the air, especially without an enclosure?

    • @beard-monster
      @beard-monster Рік тому +3

      I'd like to know the same thing!

    • @KT-pv3kl
      @KT-pv3kl Рік тому +4

      @@Grauenwolf melting pla releases a ton of volatile carbon compounds as well as other more nasty stuff. for a comparison having an fdm printer running in the same room as you is like having somebody smoking cigarettes right next to you. the only difference is a smoker usually only smokes a couple of minutes every few hours, a printer runs for 10+hrs straight.

    • @riakata
      @riakata Рік тому +3

      PLA produces some microfine particles but is about as bad as burning popcorn in the microwave still a bit cancer causing but tiny enough that it doesn't really matter if you have at least a bit of air exchange in the room. ABS on the other hand is extremely nasty stuff so don't print that at home if you don't know how to handle the fumes. Many plastics when melted make nasty stuff but PLA being corn based is generally considered pretty safe. SLA resins are a whole different ball game being liquid photo sensitive plastics and are reactive chemicals vs PLA which is inert at room temp.

    • @raconianmoon
      @raconianmoon Рік тому +1

      @@KT-pv3kl If I remember correctly it should be noted that the study that claimed that had some pretty flawed methodology, they were printing the PLA at 245 degrees celcius, which is well hot enough for it to start burning and more than 60 degrees hotter than normal print temperatures. At regular temps it's much more benign

  • @jmarshal
    @jmarshal Рік тому +57

    More people need to see this as 3d printing becomes more accessible.

  • @Xethl
    @Xethl Рік тому +6

    I'm glad someone finally measured it and spoke about it. I've been debating getting one at uni in my dorm room, but with this there's just no way I can risk the health of my flat mates and myself for a few prints. I really wish companies would be honest about that, but I guess their investors wouldn't be too happy with them being honest

    • @Randorandom232
      @Randorandom232 Рік тому +1

      Ppl have been saying this for years little Boi.

    • @Xethl
      @Xethl Рік тому +5

      @@Randorandom232 yes, old man. I'm aware. But they always say "it's dangerous". To what extent? For how long? Is using it in a room that is isolated with the door open after enough? Questions not many online answer, old man.

    • @Randorandom232
      @Randorandom232 Рік тому +1

      @@Xethl yes they do. They tell you venting is important. Either with proper filters or to outside. And no you don't need to be told more than once or a few seconds!

    • @Xethl
      @Xethl Рік тому +1

      @@Randorandom232 it's also dangerous to eat apple seeds, nice to know how much though :)

    • @archemides1517
      @archemides1517 Рік тому

      the numbers he is getting are prob completely useless to determine anything valuable proper machines costs thousands and require extsive setup for for long period of time to get accurate numbers. its basically the diffence between a gage to tell you the car is moving vs an actual speedo telling you exactly how fast your going

  • @ivorybow
    @ivorybow 4 місяці тому +1

    I just purchased my first 3-D printer. Your video is the first I’ve seen warning me of the danger. I knew I needed ventilation and that heat maintenance is important but I had no idea. I was exposing myself to such a risk. Thank you so much! I will purchase adequate PPE before, I use it the first time

  • @pbyfr
    @pbyfr Рік тому +15

    Very interesting video. I didn't know resin was that nasty while printing, but I knew from working on real size glider that dust from sanded hard resin is toxic overtime (so much that someone which become allergic to it can not anymore just go inside a big hangar with gliders in it).

    • @devinanderson15
      @devinanderson15 11 місяців тому +1

      In a well ventilated room it’s not, in a large moderately ventilated room it’s not. His issue is coming from being in a shed what is almost airtight because he doesn’t have heating ability. I have a small resin printer in my basement that doesn’t even make the air quality dial move he might have a very large resin printer or a more toxic resin but I’m thinking most of his issue is self inflicted.

  • @flyback_driver
    @flyback_driver Рік тому +2

    I know a lot of people dont remember much from high school or maybe even college chemistry but I see this with nearly every hobby I have. Carbon filter to filter the air for soldering, welding, work with plastics, ect ect. Its never that simple. If you recall those hoods in the lab they don't vent the air into the atmosphere they run through multi million dollar filtration systems to scrub the air. The reason we vent is typically our exhaust isnt as harmful to the environment and we don't have a multi million dollar filtration system. Fan (you've already got one), air ducting (couple bucks at a hardware store), and some duct tape. Twenty thirty bucks bam no more problem.

  • @mandalorianknight7002
    @mandalorianknight7002 Рік тому +14

    I’m happy that the initial project springboarded into this PSA. Resin never bothered me much in my three years of printing but like you said about the carbon filters, it just adds to potentially more harmful exposure 😬

  • @filipeschenkel
    @filipeschenkel Рік тому +9

    Have you ever studied how dangerous FDM printers are? This is an amazing video and I find it really odd that the 3D printing community doesn't address those issues so clearly... Thanks a lot for bringing up this discussion.

    • @blackdeath099
      @blackdeath099 11 місяців тому +2

      That's mainly because it's relatively new to the consumer hobby space and the long term effects of VOC exposure aren't exactly known.

    • @Orannis01
      @Orannis01 11 місяців тому +1

      FDM printers put out similar pollution levels to living by a road.

  • @andrewowens5653
    @andrewowens5653 Рік тому +7

    My first observation is that you're probably not an engineer. The fan you're using for the carbon filter doesn't have enough pressure, and as you already mentioned you need to have a lot more volume of activated carbon. I recommend the pellet type. That way the air can flow through and be intercepted by much more surface area. The other thing to do is install a ventilation fan to remove the air from the room every 5 minutes or so. That way you won't get any backflow into your house or apartment. Cheers!

  • @SaltyMcSaltyPants
    @SaltyMcSaltyPants Рік тому +5

    Thank you very much for the warning! I really didn't understand the risks I was taking. Guess I'm getting myself some new PPE before I use mine again 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @Salaundre
    @Salaundre Рік тому +3

    Thanks for making this. I’m thinking of getting into resin printing. This is definitely something I was concerned about with both types of printing.

  • @travisrobinson6918
    @travisrobinson6918 8 місяців тому +1

    i'm glad i found your video. I'm about to start resin 3d printing and i live in an apartment two bedroom. I plan on setting my station up in the non occupied room that has a window. I never knew any of this. thank you

  • @hidrowiz1313
    @hidrowiz1313 Рік тому +4

    Ahh this explains why ive been sick living in the same space with 2 resin printers (they dont run all the time and i drain the vats when not in use and also have fans circulating the air as well as a window for fresh air to come in) seems to be only when im printing that i become tired and breathe weird.

  • @effindave6909
    @effindave6909 Рік тому +6

    I worked in a chemical manufacturing plant for about 10 years making polyols, isocyanates, epoxy and polyester resins and hardeners and a few accelerants and inhibitors. The developed reaction thing is 100% true. Be safe out there guys!

  • @SeonasStudio
    @SeonasStudio Рік тому +19

    My first printer was in the house for exactly one print, years ago. The smell of the resin made me concerned about fumes, and I have animals that can’t wear ppe. So now all my printing paraphernalia lives out in my carport, in a little makeshift room with slatted walls and lots of air gaps. Yes it gets dusty and covered in leaves, yes I have to contend with printing outside the times that the sun shines through the slats, but I’m a lot more comfortable with it all out there rather than contained in my house. I too want to keep enjoying my printers so it’s worth it.

  • @matthewplambeck3638
    @matthewplambeck3638 Рік тому +1

    Gloves, the Voc Mask and lab coat is great, honestly, to solve the problems with heat, I just bought a $20 Heat band (they use them for fermenting alcohol) i tighten around the VAT and that works perfectly, is low power, just set it all up with protective gear on and leave the space to let it print, You don't need to heat the whole room, just the Resin Vat. when your all done and cleaned leave the window open for a while, having a separate space to where you live is the biggest thing. I do it in my shed with the heat band, in winter all the time, used to fail a lot before the band, but been gold since then, Great video, i appreciated it!

  • @Atlas3D
    @Atlas3D Рік тому +18

    TY so much for making this video - we have been banging on about this for years now - will be sharing this around. Respect the chemistry folks. This is why i wear a full facemask when i am in our print room. I've had more than a few people push back on us as being to safety concious - but i can tell you from personal experience resin will impact your health if you do not take proper precautions.
    Thank you again for making this video. We will be adding it to our discord and sharing it around to new printers.

    • @TabletopUpgradesLeanJourney
      @TabletopUpgradesLeanJourney Рік тому +3

      Too safety conscious! Really? I’d rather be in that camp than too carefree, well done dude, keep on going!

  • @matthall6986
    @matthall6986 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you. I’ll ad to your PSA. I got my resin printer set up on Sunday (3 days ago). I was excited. I had gloves and goggles but didn’t really think/care about a respirator filter. I had my COWAY air filter going full blast and I’m in a 500 sq ft room so, I’m good. I thought. After four print runs and 3 cleanings in 3 days, I am currently dealing with an inflamed throat and lungs. I have lost my voice, and it hurts to breathe. I figured I’m not staying in the room the whole time so it’s not that bad… learn from my mistake people. Also, I think most of the damage came from when I was tooth brush cleaning 42 small prints over top of the Isopropyl alcohol container. Get a respirator mask for VOCs and open a window to vent people. That’s the last time I roll my eyes at an OSHA safety brief at work too!

  • @ChrisHarmon1
    @ChrisHarmon1 Рік тому +47

    I got insanely sick at the height of my resin printing adventures during the covid pandemic. Wasnt the type of sick where you cough or feel a fever, just felt absolutely wiped out. I had been touching my prints directly while washing them in a vat of alcohol i kept re-using and really think it may have been the cause. For about 3 months i was 100% wiped out could barely get out of bed and thought I was dying sometimes. Not sure it was the cause but it did happen at same time. Ive mainly gone back to FDM since.

    • @hazonku
      @hazonku Рік тому +22

      Yeah touching alcohol and huffing alcohol fumes full of resin will definitely kick your butt if you're doing it regularly.

    • @paladro
      @paladro Рік тому +10

      could have also been covid, given the time frame you mentioned... plenty of them over the counter tests aren't accurate.

    • @JennaHartDemon
      @JennaHartDemon Рік тому +5

      Yeah, like a pregnancy test. If its no, it could be yes. If its yes then its definitely yes

    • @bbbbbbb51
      @bbbbbbb51 Рік тому +10

      ​@@JennaHartDemonnot at all. False positives were extremely common for PCR tests. It's pretty out in the open and has been for 1-2 years at this point. I'm always kind of shocked when people don't know things like this, but then again a lot of people just want to put that period of time behind them.

    • @JennaHartDemon
      @JennaHartDemon Рік тому +4

      @@bbbbbbb51 I was not aware. I just investigated this and yeah, depending on the brand and test style the false positive rate can be quite high. I've only ever tested when I was sick and believe the results I received. It is disappointing to realize just how unreliable these at home tests can be. Thanks for the info

  • @VRvelocity907
    @VRvelocity907 7 місяців тому +1

    I had mine in a shop with two open garage doors and an open window at the print station. It’s perfect. I recommend people just make a print station outside and just print at night and let it rip. Issue solved.

  • @ScytheNoire
    @ScytheNoire Рік тому +3

    1) All resin printers need to have heated vats. This is on the 3D printer manufacturers to make sure it has them, and on consumers to demand it and not purchase 3D printers without them. No one is buying filament printers that don't have heated beds. No one should be buying resin printers without heated vats.
    2) Air needs to be exchanged from a work area. Venting is not enough, need to be able to bring in a fresh source of air that isn't contamentated.
    3) Carbon air filters do work, but you need to have a MUCH bigger filter. That little desk thing is useless, as are the one that come in resin printers. For a small space that size, you'd need at least a 5 gallon pail size carbon filter. There are DIY projects for those.

  • @chrisx742
    @chrisx742 11 місяців тому +1

    Build a solid mdf enclosure large enough to contain the printer with one acrylic side so you can see the printing. Have a single duct at the top, venting to the outside with a fan pulling air. Have a small one-direction (and sealable) input on the underside. During printing, all of the VOCS will be contained within the box. Before opening the box, activate the fan to clear out the chemicals. It should be easy to maintain temperature during printing because you are not constantly exchanging air.

  • @Gormadt
    @Gormadt Рік тому +22

    I'd love to see an in depth video about the kinds of exhaust systems that are good for resin fumes

  • @KatanaBeatsPaper
    @KatanaBeatsPaper Рік тому

    More people need to see this I've seen alot especially on tiktok, of very unsafe usage of resin printing ie:no gloves, no respirator, barely ventilation etc.

  • @garyseaman6105
    @garyseaman6105 Рік тому +42

    I have FDM printers. Resin holds an interest for me but also a fear. I love the high detail, but a lot more is involved with resins. Thank you for the video.

    • @MateuszAdamczyk
      @MateuszAdamczyk Рік тому +3

      FDM printers do the same: they heat up plastic and relase VCOs into air.

    • @K8Stuff
      @K8Stuff Рік тому +2

      @@MateuszAdamczyk Agree - just not to the extend of resin printers.

    • @juggernaugh75321
      @juggernaugh75321 Рік тому +8

      ​@@MateuszAdamczykThey do but heating up your oven released far more VOCs into the air then printing with PETG or PLA but we don't talk about that unfortunately.

    • @MrGTAmodsgerman
      @MrGTAmodsgerman Рік тому +2

      @@MateuszAdamczyk Not really worth to mention, as long you don't start printing filament like ABS, ASA or Nylon.

    • @robrs210
      @robrs210 Рік тому +1

      It’s not voc’s with fdm printing, it’s microfibres.

  • @markoantesic4362
    @markoantesic4362 Рік тому +1

    I run a fdm print farm. Mostly ABS. Because the printers to print room volumen ration is bad, the air gets really stinky. I tried a lot of things. At the end, I run a nevermore filter in every printer AND have the room exhausting at 1000 m˘3/h AND a recirculating carbon filter in the room at 700m˘3/h. I can still smell the printers, but its ways better that before.
    The key with filtering air is to get the air speed over the filter material right and to have enough kg of carbon. Also form what I have seen the carbon on the "mesh" filters (like eligo or bamboo is using) its useless. I change the nevermore filer (approx. 20g) every 3 days to keep the smell down. The carbon content of the sponge filter is a couple maybe 1g.
    If anybody wants to carbon filter the room, I suggest looking at some grow shops. They have the can carbon filters and fans (be careful to match the flow rates). Those filters are proper 20-30 kg ones. A set up for a 500 m^3/h fan with filter is approx. 300-400 €.

  • @hazonku
    @hazonku Рік тому +3

    As someone who's worked in professional painting VOCs are no joke. I've worked in priming booths where it's PPE to the gills in front of a massive 12' diameter fan. Oh, that was all OUTSIDE btw.

  • @Israfelsrevenge
    @Israfelsrevenge 11 місяців тому +1

    Beginning to understand the issues I've been having, I didn't do any research before starting and haven't used any protective equipment and been printing in my 11x14 bedroom while sleeping in it with the door shut.. used to have the door and window open but other people in the house complained about the smell and letting the ac out, I haven't had smell since 2021 so it never bothered me on the smell side of it

  • @Kainthereaper
    @Kainthereaper Рік тому +4

    The thing about carbon filters is their performance is directly correlated between overall mass and airflow. If you have too low of either it will essentially do nothing. For best results you should be using a large carbon filter attached to an inline fan. Similar to what people do in grow tents.

  • @creativi-tea398
    @creativi-tea398 Рік тому +9

    I'm a professional mofelmaker at a 3d printing company. I've been trying to tell people online that they really need to take more precautions. Some people have them in their bedrooms or living rooms. No ventilation or enclosure at all.
    These need to be kept in non living spaces and use appropriate ppe like respirators and gloves etc.
    At the least you can get an enclosure like a hydroponics tent and you can vent through a dryer tube with a fan and have heating elements.

    • @alandtic4616
      @alandtic4616 8 місяців тому

      Hey i 3d print in a large open area and wear gloves and a mask, and leave it after like 30 seconds and come back when it's done. It's a large shed with fans on the roof? is this ok? should i do anything more or am i safe,

    • @OppGoblinTv
      @OppGoblinTv 7 місяців тому

      Yoo i just bought a anycubic photon mono x ,was gonna put it in a closet in my bedroom 💀Skipped the line and bought my first ever 3d printer as a resin printer💀

  • @charmio
    @charmio Рік тому +57

    Just be aware those cheap TVOC meters are ludicrously sensitive. I once used deodorant in the same room as one and the alarm didn't shut off for an entire hour.
    Perhaps we should be avoiding deodorant too but you have to draw the line somewhere.

    • @Woodledude
      @Woodledude Рік тому +33

      You make a good point, so let's dig into this just a touch more.
      A: Clearly the video does not represent a scientifically rigorous study on what's actually happening here; it's just a PSA advising heightened levels of caution, which I can get behind regardless.
      B: Not all VOCs are harmful; "volatile" just means "enters the air easily", and many common and perfectly safe fragrances are VOCs just by their nature. So your point is good; a device that just measures how many VOCS in general are in the air doesn't give us a ton of precise data to work with on how dangerous this is.
      C: We could probably use a follow-up of some kind, from somewhere, measuring specific known harmful VOCs present in resin printing, and how different management strategies mitigate them or fail to. Will we get that? I don't know. But erring on the side of caution is sensible until we have more evidence to work with.
      Overall, I find it hard to disagree with the main point the video makes - Caution is, and always has been, advisable if one gets into resin printing, because it comes with many risks and hazards. Furthermore, just because we think some new idea will solve a specific problem because it's building on stuff that's supposed to work or has worked before, that hardly means we can skip the part where we actually test those assumptions, and think critically about our health and safety, especially with the propensity for DIY solutions that naturally comes with access to this technology.
      The video's message is overall good, I think, even if it is a bit vague and coming from a place of moderate paranoia. Paranoia is not an inappropriate train of thought with such a host of unhealthy toxins in play, I think. The power of resin printing comes at a price, and not just monetary.

    • @7elemente
      @7elemente Рік тому +8

      I completely agree ! But funny story on me, actually I developped a really bad allergic reaction to deodorant out of a sudden ... so for more than 10 years I just use grandma's recipes like bicarbonate or simply water x) .... so from that moment I really get concerned about deodorants, do a lot of research and find out that 99% of them are very toxic too (sadly). But anyways, completely agree with cheap TVOC meters, they aren't very accurate :D

    • @geoff4383
      @geoff4383 Рік тому +6

      i stopped using deodorant 30 years ago because they cause me to smell bad when i used it and i sweated more.
      plain old soap and water works for me and i never had any complaints about smelling bad.
      another issue with deodorant is the links to cancer and respiratory diseases.
      like so many things its the cumulative damage of chemicals that gets you.
      I knew a guy that after 9 years got seriously ill from working in job involving using dangerous chemicals because he did not use the protective equipment and the training provided to him.
      I worked the same job for 10 years before training the same guy because i was leaving to start a new job.
      I warned him countless times of the hazards and the risk to his health if he did not follow his training but sadly he did not.
      chemical can be a death by a thousand cuts.

    • @7elemente
      @7elemente Рік тому +2

      @@geoff4383 completely agree with you ! Since I stopped using deodorant, I smell much better and I even sweat less. Honestly I've almost died that time when I got my allergic reaction ... and I remember I bought some "bio" deodorant which was supposed to be harmless. :D

    • @7elemente
      @7elemente Рік тому +3

      @@Woodledude indeed the video is very good and I'm happy to see this kind of content nowadays ! My company work with plenty of harmfull solutions (3D printing resin being one of them and on top 3 worse toxins). Actually most TVOC meters arent's sensitive enough and they aren't completely optimised for most of harmfull toxins (if you have some 1k euros in your pocket, you may find "something" that's better, but there is no meter that has it all, usually you need to use many toxin meters, as each one is optimised on few molecules and toxines, in order to properly detect them). As you said, not all VOCs are harmful (even if actually, taking the deodorant example, a lot of them they are toxic but at some moment they are not "known or considered" as toxic --- I hope this makes sense somehow). The air purifier these 3D companies propose can filter only few of these toxins and at a very small pace ... they aren't enough at all and even worse (as the video explains), this will give a false feeling of safety. Even if you use a very good air purifier, it's still useless without a good ventilation. In our company we have big windows (on the walls and ceiling, plus a very big truck door, which we keep open when we work + some $$$ air purifiers), and I have to say that we still need to put our face mask protection and so on, only for using the smallest of our 3D resin printers ... in the future we will close everything in special enclosure (inspired from medical background) because the toxins still stay a long time in the air (which is pretty crazy, even for small and fast manipulation such as few minutes)... it still amazes me that a lot of people use these 3D resin printers in the bedroom or kitchen, next to kids and animals, but I hope it will change little by little. Cheers :)

  • @Indy1977TX
    @Indy1977TX Рік тому

    Thank you for posting this. I have a 3D printer but barely used it. Put it in my office and within 24 hours instantly regretted it. It is hard to find a space without traffic that is protected from the outside.

  • @michaegi4717
    @michaegi4717 Рік тому +9

    Yes this seem to be one option... or you just use this fan to do ventilation of your room. Removing the stuff is always more effective than filtering. There are also ventilations available with 'kind of' heat recovery which might save some energy for cooling/heating of your workshop. This is usually still cheaper than those carbon filters.

    • @nosalis
      @nosalis Рік тому +1

      well, removing it outside is just moving the problem elsewhere :) if I was venting my resin printer room to a neighbor BBQ pit, I'm sure they will start complaining very quickly
      It's a combination of things
      better filtration that actually works , and removing the rest
      or finding some reaction that makes it non-toxic , like when you wash the resin in IPA , so somethign along those lines , like an active IPA filter - if such thing is even possible

    • @miya1285
      @miya1285 10 місяців тому

      @@nosalisyou do understand that the air dilutes it so it’s not hazardous, right?

    • @JacopoSkydweller
      @JacopoSkydweller 10 місяців тому

      Less hazardous to your immediate health, it doesn't magically make it non hazardous 🤣@@miya1285

  • @bobbarron8820
    @bobbarron8820 Рік тому +1

    This is a very affordable and practical way of exchanging air and hence getting the VOC (volatile organic compounds) fumes out of your work area. I see from the meter that you get a quick removal of VOCs and then a slight rise later on. This is because VOCs are heavier than air and once moved outside, they drop to the ground just outside and begin to collect. The intake of your heat exchanger is then picking them back up and moving them inside. You need to make a vent tube to move them farther around the corner so that the intake doesn't grab them from the exhaust. My vent system intake and exhausts are on opposite sides of the house where the exhaust is in a no-traffic area.

  • @dereineschwarzerabe
    @dereineschwarzerabe Рік тому +3

    I still want to get into resin printing one day but videos like these are so important. Too many people don't hear about the safety aspects. I had to explain to a former co-worker, why their child having a 3d printer in the bedroom is a bad idea, and thankfully the printer wasn't there very long, they listened and moved it in a safer space.

  • @vlaktorbb
    @vlaktorbb 6 місяців тому +1

    This is the reason i stopped printing resin after two months. I was using gloves, glasses and coat. It just doesn’t feel right, and you will eventually contact with something. I switched to back to FDM printing with a vent directly to the outside. Feel alot safer now.

  • @esurfrider7687
    @esurfrider7687 Рік тому +5

    Thanks for the video, I went ahead and picked up an air quality meter off Amazon just to check for safety and from what I can tell the resin doesn’t really move the needle quite as much as IPA, which is completely off the charts and so if you use a water washable resin like I do and very little IPA the air quality is actually quite good. well inside the enclosure it’s nasty, but outside, there’s barely no gas is escaping at least according to this air quality meter so I would be more careful when it comes to using IPA the RESINS themselves are not terrible

    • @Keep-Making
      @Keep-Making  Рік тому +2

      Thanks for the info. I'll give that a good test

    • @esurfrider7687
      @esurfrider7687 Рік тому +6

      @@Keep-Making another observation I made was that apparently my farts are more toxic than the resins I use according to this air quality meter🤣🤣🤣

    • @ulbuilder
      @ulbuilder Рік тому

      ​@@esurfrider7687the other day my wife came into the bathroom while I was taking the Browns to the Superbowl. Moments later the smoke alarm in the hallway went off!

    • @jtrain9926
      @jtrain9926 Рік тому

      ​@@esurfrider7687what brand? I tried Airties and it's ok but def not keyed to formaldehyde and the heavier stuff resin emits

    • @MrGTAmodsgerman
      @MrGTAmodsgerman Рік тому

      @@esurfrider7687 Don't rely on cheap Amazon air quality meter. There is much more into it then just VOC's and "smell"

  • @TheitGuy-u4l
    @TheitGuy-u4l 26 днів тому

    Excellent video!! Did not think for one minute that this felt like a public service video. This was a video that NEEDS to be seen.

  • @avianmaster
    @avianmaster Рік тому +6

    A nice bit of knowledge on the health hazards in resin printing, nicely done and good job for bringing attention to something many people likely just shrug off. Fumes & breathing hazards were some of the worries that had me on the fence when I got interested in resin printing since I don't have free space for a completely dedicated print area. I ended up buying an enclosed growing tent w/ some flexible ducting and a duct fan to completely draw the vapors from the printing enclosure and out a nearby window. Can never be too safe when it comes to precautions against hazardous chemicals, vapors, and other similar things.

  • @LordOfJazz
    @LordOfJazz Рік тому +1

    I have resin printed on a Mars 3 Pro and Saturn 2 when the outside temp was close to 0 and the printing room window was open 24/7. I'm guessing the room temp was at least bellow 5c and my printed come out fine. I am not saying you will be able to print like this but dialled in exposure times and clean print beds helped me get flawless prints just as consistently as if the temps were "ideal". The only "problem I ever have is when printing in those conditions the print plate sticks to the supports VERY well and take a little longer to get off. But I think it is a worth while trade off. Plus I'm not getting "Killed" by my resin prints :)

  • @max16
    @max16 Рік тому +4

    I bought 2 air purity testers and set them up around my printers. From what I remember both can test for everything at a partical size of like 3up wich is within the range of these resins
    Nothing came out of the shroud. Only when you open the hood they go off. And at that point you should have a mask and air purifier on. Otherwise while it’s printing it’s totaly fine.

    • @notanactualuser
      @notanactualuser Рік тому

      Makes me wonder if the carbon filters would work better if it's under the hood or a part of the hood itself

    • @max16
      @max16 Рік тому

      @@notanactualuser my testing it made no difference.. i just have a good rated air punifyer in my room where i print that moves air around when i lift the shroud and thats all that is needed. other then that. while its printing if the shroud is on as it should be. nothing should be leaking out.

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine Рік тому +1

      @@max16 There should be a gasket seal on these shrouds, correct?
      I'd definitely urge people to be sure the gasket is properly seated. It's probably the biggest safety precaution a casual (i.e. hobbyist) printer can take.

  • @freespacejunkremoval
    @freespacejunkremoval Рік тому +1

    You don't have to be sorry for looking out for yourself & making content that helps us better understand proper safety in are lives. I live in studio apartment & I want a 3d printer, but,, I want to be safe about how I do it.
    Super Way Thank You for making this video...

  • @pjlights164
    @pjlights164 Рік тому +5

    Man, thank you for this. I've always known I should be doing more with safety/ventilation but for some reason I've always just told myself it's not that bad. This is a wake up call. Definitely will be doing something different with my 3D printing space.

  • @peterpensi9478
    @peterpensi9478 Рік тому

    Nice, thank you for raising this issue in my yt feed.. make one now about the finished product … it fumes out for years. It’s amazing that the homemaker space is not more vocal about it!

  • @4.0.4
    @4.0.4 Рік тому +4

    Thanks for this PSA. Most 3D printing channels make it seem relatively safe. I imagine at some point there'll be some kinda crap but non-toxic resin (like lead-free solder).

    • @markkNL
      @markkNL Рік тому +3

      It is relatively safe, he didn't show any proof for his toxic claim. the MSDS of all resins I've seen so far show it as being a mild irritant, with the only severe toxicity being ingestion of it or being exposed to it while being a fish (aquatic life). The only thing this video shows is that his homemade filter is crap in removing random volatile organic compounds out of the air. Wear proper PPE while working in the same room and it's all fine.

    • @KICKFIST0
      @KICKFIST0 Рік тому +3

      There is a huge difference between a hobbyist printer and people like this guy. He has a dedicated shed for his printer, which means no air flow and no ventilation. Your average hobby guy like us? We can just open a window and turn a fan on and the room never gets polluted enough to matter. You should ABSOLUTELY wear PPE. Gloves, safety glasses(I just use sunglasses) and a mask of some sort are absolutely critical but all of those, an open window and a fan is pretty much a slam dunk.

  • @EternalQuestion
    @EternalQuestion Рік тому

    I have my resin printing setup in my garage. The garage door is pretty leaky and I have an extractor in there as well to vent out the fumes. Most importantly it's separate from my house and I don't need to be in there while I'm printing. I wear my mask when I go in to clean and cure prints.
    The temperature is wildly variable depending on the time of year, but I solved that problem by building a heated enclosure for the printer. It works brilliantly and I haven't had a single print fail since I started using it.
    I see so many youtubers taking massive liberties with safety so it's nice to see someone giving these things due consideration. Resin printing is a pretty new technology and we don't know the long term effects yet. It makes sense to be cautious.

  • @zora_tech
    @zora_tech Рік тому +22

    You have to be really careful and test out the air monitor because I bought the one from the same brand but the more expensive one, earlier this year and had to return it since it did not work. I had calibrated several times following their instructions and tested it by leaving it in a closed room next to some resin and after a couple minutes to an hour it showed that the air quality was still good and had no change what so ever.

    • @TabletopUpgradesLeanJourney
      @TabletopUpgradesLeanJourney Рік тому +5

      My friend is a geotechnical engineer and uses a VOC meter at brownfields sites to measure off gassing from various old industrial sites. The VOC meter they use cost thousands and thousands of pounds and specifies the types of VOCs detected. I’d be very wary of anything cheap. There’s a reason these things are expensive.

    • @mephistosprincipium
      @mephistosprincipium Рік тому

      @@TabletopUpgradesLeanJourneyexactly

    • @reddragonflyxx657
      @reddragonflyxx657 Рік тому +1

      ​@@TabletopUpgradesLeanJourneyThe stuff used for oil and gas is probably protected against impact/aerosolized oil/heat/humidity, and explosion proof. That's more expensive to make and a specialty product (lower volume, buyers have deep pockets). It also identifies specific compounds, which could get very expensive due to requiring completely different sensors (like a metal detector vs an X-ray spectrometer; if you want to find metal it's cheap, if you want to identify the alloy it's 5 figures USD).
      A VOC sensor isn't difficult or expensive to manufacture, and higher price doesn't mean better quality. I'd trust multiple cheap sensors in agreement over a single expensive one.

    • @petercallison5765
      @petercallison5765 8 місяців тому

      Resin only produces VOCs while curing.

  • @SandraOrtmann1976
    @SandraOrtmann1976 Рік тому +2

    Somebody in my costuming club started using liquid resin to smooth her FDM prints, because it was much easier and less messy than the boring, conventional sanding. I asked whether she was wearing gloves, a breathing mask and eye protection. She asked why. I told her that resin in its liquid state is highly toxic and that it causes allergic reactions and can destroy her lungs. She was absolutely shocked to hear that. I asked whether she had not informed herself before buying the resin. No, of course not.
    Then we talked in our Discord about different methods of manufacturing hard costume pieces. I said that I had no easy option to use a resin printer. We have our FDM printer in the ceiling in a cabinet, but as my husband also has his model railway there, we would have to do serious remodelling and room separation to be able to use a resin printer safely. The reaction of my buddies was priceless. One person said he has a resin printer in his living room in his crafting area. His two kitties and his partner live there, too. It always fascinates and shocks me how naive people can be.

  • @NNextremNN
    @NNextremNN Рік тому +11

    I kinda have a feeling that controlling the temperature and climate inside the printer/vat would be easier then controlling it outside of it.

    • @riakata
      @riakata Рік тому

      You could plumb all the hoods into the intake of the HRV plus a small balancing valve to not cause the blower to overspeed too much then your air exchange would be slowed down sigificantly and capture the fumes right from the source. You may draw dust into the printers though which could mess things up over time so putting an air filter on the room return air to filter out any dust would be a good idea. Then it also automatically would increase airflow when you remove a hood and if you have a manual valve over the cleanup area you could minimize the amount of air exchange and thus heating cost.
      Although it is probably much simplier to just get a massive HRV and heatpump unit and then the whole space is covered.

  • @pn98lim72
    @pn98lim72 11 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for sharing this! I'm a total beginner to start using resin printer and this video really helps me to understand about the risk and how to take precaution to protect ourselves.

  • @DaemonSmith1
    @DaemonSmith1 Рік тому +10

    Thanks so much for this informative video, I've been wondering how I'm going to safely begin printing and I'm a little worried now I might not have an appropriate space! Bit of a bummer but I'd rather know than get sick

  • @glooomie8927
    @glooomie8927 Рік тому

    good watch, I've just got back into printing and really wasn't caring to much but over the last few days after headaches decided to look into this more and will be changing my setup and ways.

  • @MihaiDesigns
    @MihaiDesigns Рік тому +4

    Thanks for sharing this Jonathan. It's one of the reasons I don't do resin printing. Have fun 3D printing!

    • @DisgruntledPigumon
      @DisgruntledPigumon Рік тому

      Not sure if you’re implying you do FDM rather than resin, but FDM is almost as bad.
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9229569/

  • @ibendover4817
    @ibendover4817 Місяць тому +1

    Consumers: "Research and talk about the safety of 3d printing fumes"
    3D printer manufacturers: *creates more hazardous consumer SLS printers

  • @JohnR1298
    @JohnR1298 Рік тому +3

    Well I won't be buying a 3D Printer in the near future 😕 I didn't realise the dangers of 3D printing! Much respect to you guys doing it 👍

    • @sandplasma
      @sandplasma 9 місяців тому

      Only Resin, you can buy a FDM 3D printer. Those are not dangerous.

  • @livelyjay
    @livelyjay 10 місяців тому

    Thanks for making this video. I had an inkling when I bought my printer a few years ago that it was toxic. I always wear a respirator and gloves, but only disposables so I'll upgrade those to something a little more durable. I have a 600CFM fan pulling air from my enclosed printer space directly through my basement window to the outdoors and when I forget run it, you can smell the resin fumes creeping into the main living space. Thanks to your video I plan on tossing a block of the charcoal into the venting port in my enclosure and I'm going to invest in an air quality meter to keep track of the VOCs.

  • @AlexandreProkoudine
    @AlexandreProkoudine Рік тому +5

    Yeah, a guy I used to know died after spending some hours laser-cutting polymers without ventilation or mask. He was a very nice dude, educating kids on using Blender.

    • @riakata
      @riakata Рік тому +2

      There is a whole list of materials you should never cut on a laser cutter because of the hyper toxic fumes it makes.

  • @jeanette2556
    @jeanette2556 11 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for your video!!!! You've shared the real hazards of resin that no one talks about! Companies that manufacture resin do not fully disclose the dangers.

  • @sudopuff8549
    @sudopuff8549 Рік тому +4

    I like to do character designs in Blender and thought it would be a neat idea to get a resin printer so I can make figures out of my work to sell on Etsy or something similar, but ultimately I decided against it due to safety concerns. If a guaranteed non-toxic solution is found I'll get into the hobby, but until then I don't think I'd be able to reasonably protect myself (and my cat) well enough in my space with PPE.

  • @Icarus9083
    @Icarus9083 Рік тому

    Thank you so much for making this video. I knew the resin fumes were bad to breathe in but didn’t know quite how bad. Used to have my printer in a garage but moved into a small apartment recently and I felt super sick after printing a mini. Found your video and I now have a enclosure with ventilation and the air quality sensor you used and it’s now safe to print again

  • @discussion210
    @discussion210 Рік тому +5

    Couple of questions, 1) how would this impact for an american garage that is not air tight but also jot fully open? 2) are the water washable or soy based resins significantly better than something like an abs like or general purpose resin? For clarity, i was excited to switch to a new resin printer i recently picked up for longer/larger prints to reduce risk of fire compared to fdm, but dont want to risk my health or my wife's health (or containmate my garager)

  • @Boogie_the_cat
    @Boogie_the_cat 11 місяців тому

    Thanks for telling the truth. Ive seen many UA-camrs claim its non toxic, just because the company claims on Amazon that its plant-based and nontoxic. They make those claims 1) to sell more resin and 2) because nobody is going to take them to court, at least in the US, there is not much legal work being done to keep truth in advertising, no lawyers touch those cases unless its a huge obvious class action and a slam dunk for millions in damages.

  • @allanpberry5706
    @allanpberry5706 Рік тому +4

    I have mine in a tent with ventilation going out the window, I was just doing the gloves and mask but felt that just getting rid of all the chemicals in the air was better. I can also take the hood/scoop off of the tent and have the fans just vent out the whole room, in case of an accident or the tent not being properly sealed. It's also great for when I'm cleaning the resin off of prints which is usually the worst for smell.

  • @Vertrucio
    @Vertrucio Рік тому +1

    I've enclosed my printers, cleaning, and curing stations that filter then vent outside. Thankfully I live in a temperate area. But your heat exchanger would work better if you just never let the VOCs get into the overall room by having both sides covered with intakes.

  • @Darker1208
    @Darker1208 Рік тому +15

    the fact that most 3d printers are poorly made junk that barely work will kill us through frustration long before the resin will.

    • @ba_charles
      @ba_charles 8 місяців тому

      you're more likely to be blinded by a malfunctioning laser than anything else

  • @Just_Randomi
    @Just_Randomi Рік тому

    I'm glade that someone, anyone is talking about resin safety. I have a industrial air vent it was about $200 but it was worth it. Filter replacements are not that bad and last for about a year. I don't run my resin printers all the time but when I do the vent is on %100. When I'm not resin printing I clean and wrap my printers in plastic wrap to seal them airtight, and store them

  • @JustCallMeMeghan
    @JustCallMeMeghan Рік тому +15

    YES. All of this. As a resin artist (traditional 2 part, not printed, but same), I cringe and squirm so much when I see resin artists on YT or TT or IG who are working with resin without gloves or a respirator. You can delevlop severe allergies and serious health complications by even just breathing in the fumes. It's honestly scary seeing people "play" with resin without any protection.

  • @Stealth86651
    @Stealth86651 10 місяців тому +1

    Kinda weird seeing the 3D printing community not realize this. Plastics production/molding has always offgassed some seriously nasty stuff. It's a chemistry issue, something we're not magically going to solve anytime soon.