I can't believe its almost over, these two weeks have flown by! There's only 36h left to order the H&S Squidmar Airbrush! Thanks all you beautiful people who decided to get one already! I cant believe how many of you have been excited about it - THANKS! harder-squidmar.de/eng
Waiting patiently for mine to arrive, I cannot wait! Its a beautiful design and a great upgrade from my Badger 360. Although I had just decided against spending on a H&S then you changed my mind! It's all your fault Squidmar 😂
I wonder if we will get any notification about that it has been shipped. I have zero information since I ordered on the very first day. Squidmar, do you have any info about that part?
@@GrafitTomi Check the website you ordered it from. There's an update on shipping under service/help tab. Long story short if you ordered on day one, your's will ship anywhere between yesterday and december 31.
Definitely recommend against using the included plastic spatulas. Use a rubber spatula and you won't scratch the fep. Also, use microfiber cloths to clean it!
I’m actually allergic to the fumes/gasses given off as resin is hardened in the printer. Took the better part of a year & many doctors visited to figure it out… so I have a printer but it’s at a friend’s & he prints whatever files I sent him. I’ve been a patreon of Titan Forge minis for over a year & have always been pleased with their designs & presupports.
That’s rough! I accidentally was too lax with my exposure early on and sensitized myself (had the full shebang, dried skin, blisters, etc) so now I break out if there’s even a bit of residue on my skin for a bit
Did you by any chance not wear a respirator/not install proper ventilation for your printer? People seem to mostly understand you need gloves, but they just straight up fail to understand that breathing the fumes contained in uncured resin can make you develop systemic health problems and - like in your case - make them develop allergies, in turn making them unable to operate a resin printer ever again.
For anyone who didn't know, when running the clean sequence, when setting the seconds, press the actual number and it brings you to another screen where you can put in how long to expose without having to press the up or down button multiple times.
I have a Phrozen Mini 4K, I had issues with failed prints. Since I started warming my resin before printing I have had zero failed prints. Just leave the resin bottle in a bowl of warm water while you get everything setup and its warm enough in 5 minutes. Its also worth mentioning I made one print with my Phrozen Mini 4K and hated the smell, long story short I cut a hole in the side of my printer cover, got some duct pipes and fans and piped it out of my window. I can now print and work in my office, not a single smell. Its amazing!
Lol I havent cleaned my vat in 4 months just keep adding new stuff. Give it a stir and away you go. Even left it as an experiment for 3 weeks. Made ZERO difference to the print quality.
@@MrBizteck Same. My resin vat just gets a good stir, then topped off with some new resin and another good stirring, it's set. I only clean the vat when I have to, and even then, you can just run the LCD test to solidify the entire bottom and just peel that off along with all the little failures sticking to the FEP. It's pretty fast and easy to recover from failures this way!
@@GoobertownHobbies Same here. I haven't really cleaned the tray in a year, just remove whatever gets stuck. Resin printing is somewhat situational and somewhat luck based. I never had the nasty problems that some people complain about.
I switched to water washable resin. So no more IPA less fumes quicker easier clean up. I have been getting great results with elegoo’s water washable resin.
I have been printing with an ABS PLA printer for 3 years (scenery mainly), and I started printing with a resin printer a couple of months ago. I started with an elegoo mars 2K pro and a Mercury plus curing machine. I have been printing with water washable resin, and apart from calibration, the only issue I had was changing my VAT plastic (I followed a tutorial by Elegoo). That's it... I have 0 fail, and I printed 5L worth of resin, I am absolutely in love with my printer, and if they were more affordable I would buy a gigantic one to print my terrain with it. My good old Enders 3 is a great printer, but I am always fixing, changing, tuning mechanical things (bed, extruder, tube, everything), a resin printer is litteraly no work at all. Put the resin in, get a supported model, press print... Done.
That trick with the leftover supports to aid in vat cleaning is going to save me so much hassle. No more digging around with a spatula and damaging the FEP. Thanks!
You can also carefully use your gloved knuckle on the underside of the FEP to rub and push the print, just enough to lift off a corner and hold it off the FEP while you get the scraper under the edge to lift. Takes a minute to get used to but good when you don't want to waste resin exposing the whole vat.
To add to your first tip, if you remove the build plate and set it in the vat while the clean mode is on it will stick to the plate and make removing it much easier
I'm with ya on the Phrozen, they are awesome, I got a Sonic Mini 4k, and you also should mention they are NOT a Chinese company, they are Taiwanese. Small difference, but it's important. And the cleaning/curing station is awesome too. I have one of those too.
Also a tip that improved my prints greatly: use PTFE lubricant on the FEP before pouring the resin in. This totally eliminated the problem of prints sticking to the FEP and extends the life of the FEP. Also, I use a water washable resin, and I use a flexible magnetic build plate. When cleaning the minis, I rinse them in a bucket, then I remove the supports, THEN I put them in the wash station. Gets the prints much cleaner, and keeps the wash liquid cleaner.
IMO the best way to go about it as a newbie like what I did was doing my research before buying a 3d printer, find out what I needed and go out and buy it, have it set up and ready to go before you buy your printer.
In my experience with 3d printing most issues are caused by users. It is by far cheaper I've saved a ton of money myself already. Ive had mine a couple of months and had zero issues outside of the first couple of days sorting settings out.
I would recommend one of the cheaper curing stations meant for nail studios. Just check that it has a function that allows to have the light on all the time. On most of these curing boxes you have changeable UV light bulbs so you can replace burned out bulbs easily. Also most of them have a reflective surface all over their inside so no fiddling willth foil. These boxes are quickly found on the internet. My boyfriend and I have found this thing quite useful and we don't mind having to do a little adjustment in the minis position to get everything cured. It works for what we need and I guess it is a decent alternative between some diy contraption and a real curing station both in price and quality
I have a nail curing thingy, but needed a bigger curing station. So I built one by simply buying UV light strips for cheep like 10 dollars. Then I get a box, cover the inside with foil, and then stick the UV light strips inside. It's the ugliest yet the best thing I have ever made
I had the same issues until I switched to water washable resins. It is so much better imo. Only the cleaning needs a bit more work, as it is only a mechanical cleaning, not an additional chemical process as you have with IPA. But getting rid of the IPA sets off the higher cost for the water washable resin and did much to keep me safe from any health related issues.
Please do not underestimate the dangers of the resin you are operating with. While IPA is a toxic chemical, resin contains way more toxic chemicals. If you don't treat the resin like it is way more dangerous than the IPA you are endangering yourself, you need to protect your respiratory system and skin from absorbing the resin's VOCs at all times uncured resin is not contained fully airtight or ventilated, or you will develop system health problems in time.
Stupid question, as someone considering a cleaning station: are there any that include a cycle that agitated the wash fluid with the UV lights on? I'd like that to help clean alcohol a bit to extend its life.
@@rcrawford42 I know that the anycubic wash and cure station can't do that. You probably wouldn't want it in the cleaning container anyway because over time there is a lot of resin that builds up and would probably clog the the whole thing up. I always transfer the alcohol in a large glas jar and put that in the wash and cure machine without the turntable and clean the alcohol that way.
One tip a lot of people miss: CHECK YOUR ROOMS TEMPERATURE. Especially in Europe, it's getting cold these days. Most standard resins do need a working temperature of above 20°C, better 25°C. You can heat the resin up on a radiator beforehand, thus helping the print to stick in the beginning. In the process of printing, the resin will warm up due too the reaction while curing the resin. If raising the temperature is not an option, you will need to raise the exposure setting, to hit it longer with UV light. Optimally, do a "XP2 Validation Matrix" test print right before a larger, critical project.
homebrewers have a similar problem with temperature. You can buy electric heating belts that wrap around the vat for like $10 from homebrew supply stores
Lichi is perfect for auto supports, i use it every time and with a 98% success rate. Another tip before curing put ur prints in hot water for 5 mins and the support practically fall off leaving no nubs or indents, then let dry before curing. These tricks have mad reson printing a breeze.
Phrozen printers ha e been awesome for me. I've had 3 brands and the Phrozen brand is the only one that worked the 1st time and have not given me any issues. The Phrozen 4K Aqua Grey is my go to resin now. It just works, doesn't smell and I have had zero fails with it. Great video.
Super late to the party, but I just got a printer recently, and thanks to your videos, and others around, I was so prepared. I've had 2 failures, both due to user error, but all of my prints have been amazing, really just due to following advice and calibrating. It's been so painfree. A friend of mine got into 3D printing a few years ago, and just became so jaded towards the whole process that he ended up getting rid of his printers, and I can't say I blame him, and if I had jumped on at the same time, it would totally be gathering dust right now, but the information out there is so much better than it was, and I am having the best time. Thanks for making cool videos like these
Got my first AnyCubic printer and Wash n Cure last March at the start of the pandemic. I've loved making my own minis so much, I upgraded to a newer Anycubic over the summer. Its amazing how much the tech in these things is changing year over year. When I bought my new one, Mono screens were newer and 4K was the hot up and coming tech. Not just 6 months later, everyone has 8K printers out. But honestly I love my current one, and the Wash n Cure is great. I can keep this printer for maybe 5 years and who knows what kind of crazy stuff will be out there by then.
I 100% agree with everything in this video. I started with an FDM and now I have been using a Phozen Mighty 4K and it would not be fun without the accessories like the Anycubic wash & cure, I’d also recommend the magnetic and steel plate from Wham Bam.
Men vilken guldklimp som dök upp bland mina föreslagna videos! Jag har precis börjat printa i resin, den här videon var kanon och gav mig många värdefulla tips! Stort tack!
the lift speeds and first layer cure time was the first thing i ever did to fix my failed prints on elegoo mars 2 mono. a great printer for a great price
I love the Anycubic Mono X! Also, the wash and cure is amazing! It was a huge upgrade from the goofy plastic containers I was using lol. If you get/have a Mono X, I recommend you spend a whopping 15 for a BIQU flexible build plate. Phenomenal!!
With lift speeds you can actually go the other way, with very fast settings (180mm/min+) that reduce both the force and time, though slow speeds are more reliable. There's a grey zone of 'medium' speeds between 60-180mm/min that have the largest peel forces. It's a bit like ripping off a bandage - you either want to go really fast or really slow.
Thats what I found with the Saturn, initially default settings caused constant fails to the point where I almost gave up, went slower (and also anyone with a Saturn, increase your lift distance, those big FEPs flex a lot!) Finally decided to go fast instead and it was just as good. Its only the middle speeds that cause issues.
@@davidmccurdy8911 same here. Ever since going to 185mm (or 180, not sure) I have significantly less fails and whats even cooler, the prints are stupid fast. Printed out a couple modular 28mm Minis (legs and upper body seperated) in under an hour.
You really have to have your printer calibrated perfectly for vroom settings to not get fails. Not that you shouldn’t have that done anyway, but a lot of people don’t and that’s why they have problems with fast lift speeds.
@@Chef_PC I think I have been super lucky then, I set them to the Sirya tech settings (even though I use Elegoo resin) ramped up the speed and off I went. I have had more problems over the last few days but I am putting that down to changing the mainboard so I had the top off so need to get my levelling just right again
@@davidmccurdy8911 I used vroom for a few months before my screen burned out (not likely related), and have just now gotten back to it. Fresh resin and having the printer dialed in really helps out everything though. I use Siraya Navy now almost exclusively because it’s moderately priced and I’ve had fewer fails than any of the other brands, especially Elegoo.
Bonus tip: YES! It took me forever to figure out how impactful lift speed can be when I first started 3D printing! None of the typical stuff you'll find on starting 3D printing talks about it, but it is, IMO, probably 80% of the cause of failed prints. Just because everyone has already covered supports, temp, location, etc. to death. Following that is hollowing, but that's another discussion entirely.
Me and my gf just did our first test print on our mini 4k, the rook came out great and I CANNOT WAIT to start throwing models in. One thing I would love is maybe a “you got a 3D printer now what” video, I feel like I have the world at my fingers and I don’t know where to grab on.
you should do a complete cure of the residues before throwing them into the garbage can. you know that the resin can be toxic both for human beings and for plants and animals.
He doesn't care, and none of these dudes ever mention stuff like that. Fuck, I've seen some minitard just dump his wash water down the drain in a vid about water washables. Ah well, it will be their families, water systems, and pets getting poisoned and growing cancer, not mine.
I don't empty the vat when I have a failed print. I use a plastic razor blade and take it off in one clean piece when possible. Once removed I literally stick my fingers in the resin for any strays. I print everyday and this method works everytime. No need to take the vat off and damage the film. Been printing for 4 months with two machines and no issues.
Great list. I was a little surprised about the complaints though. I've been FDM printing for over 3 years and SLA printing for about two months but no matter what printer or material I've ever used, I always managed to get a print to complete successfully. When it actually failed, it was my fault because I forgot to wipe the bed clean of my finger prints (with FDM printer) or forgot to support an isle on an SLA print, etc.
If your fep keeps building pools of cured resin over the duration of the print try these things one at a time: clean resin by straining it, clean fep with alcohol and lint-free tissue, reduce exposure times, check fep for scratches or ghost mark and replace it as needed,, reduce laser intensity from 100% in 5-10% increments. Hope that helps someone. Add more helpful methods if you’ve got them.
As a space scale model builder I often use old support structures as "girders" in spaceship wreckage as the background of a diorama. Great for stuff like Gundams.
I have a Phrozen Sonic Mini 4k, and I can't recommend getting a Wham Bam magnetic plate for it enough. Getting prints off the plate is *so* much easier now, and the only reason I've had to use a scraper since has been to remove prints that failed cause it's too cold out. Go slow, keep the resin warm, and get magnetic plates. Made me fall in love with printing.
I really considered getting one of those until I got a super cheap solution. "FOSHIO 2PCS Plastic Razor Scrapers" still using the first blade and it gets all the prints off the metal plate easily. About $12 lifetime supply if blades. safe for my build plate and it just works.
@@nathangerardy2669 I've used those at work and they're great, but i find the plate is easier/faster, and I don't have to worry about pre-supported files that are so small they'll fall through the mesh of my wash+cure machine.
The technology has come so far over just the last few years, I'm curious to try 3D printing myself. Also, love your uninterested face in all the random images 🤣
Great video. I just made my 1st print last night and it was successful. I made a whole build plate full of bits using lychee 3. Printed on my anycubic Photon s I got for 99 dollars. I got it in the wash right now and printing a second copy. Planning a 3rd print as we speak.
Lychee, auto supports, works 95% of the time, you can tweak the auto support settings. For smaller things I tend to use the light supports on a high or ultra density, or just mediums on bigger things. Auto supports have gotten a LOT better with the more recent releases. Slower lift speeds are the first thing I will try if I get a failed print even if it adds an hour or two to your print.
Do yourself a favor, especially if you own your house: create a negative pressure setup. Enclose the printer in a grow-box made out of nylon material (like a tent). Many grow-boxes come with openings for 4" ventilation hoses. Locate the printer against an exterior wall, and have a handyman come and install a drier vent in that wall, up somewhat so that it's above your setup. Then, get an inline fan for a 4" ventilation hose, and connect the growbox to the fan and from the fan to the vent. PROBLEM SOLVED. Especially if you have animals and/or small children, the fumes from VOCs are really, really bad. Also, when you're dealing with the print, cleaning the vat, etc, get a mask with a filter capable of filtering out the vapors. The more you spare yourself the fumes, the better your experience will be with the hobby.
I bought a halot mage and have printed some Warhammer models and the printer works great but my cureing station is a cardboard box with tinfoil on the inside and a hole on the top for a uv bulb
Legit good advice in here and all nice and summarized in bite sized chunks :) Love it. I have always been iffy on the Phrozen models ever since it came out tht their rail systems were made out of a lower end quality and tend to bend. (which is extremely BAD) But looking at the newer (and especially the bigger) models, it might be that they fixed those issues. I might give them a try later. As for cleaning models, get yourself a nice and big ultrasonic cleaner for like 100 bucks (+- 10 litres), pop in some mr clean (cheaper than pure IPA and works just as good if not better) and let it run. You get a deep and intense cleaning and you can even heat the liquid to a set temperature, which helps with removing supports afterwards.
Yes Greg at 3d printing pro is literally a genius when it comes to these machines. Saved my printer from the gumtree! Love this vid squid! Keep up the good work. Wish I could paint as well as you!
Thant last tip , run 140mm lift speeds called zoom settings and i have sonic mini 4k not had a fail since and halved my print times. much slower on the mighty though.
The resin failing might be setings and if it's not setings it might be temperature that is the problem, some resin are big babies when it comes to temperature, the work in the goldilocks range not to hot, not to cold, just right if the setings are aces then try heating up the build plate for better sticking, if you have temp controle in the printing room then read up on the just right temp and set it to that~ It might make your life all sunshine and unicorn farts~
I have an Elegoo mars 2 mono that i love. I use Elegoo black resin and have the calibration charts for the various colors of resin manufactured by Elegoo. Yes colors do matter and each has its own calibrations. I haven't had a failed print in a year or more now. The main thing is keeping the vat deposit free and changing the FEP every 50 prints or so. I use chitubox slicer and i keep an eye on the calibration settings as sometimes pre-supported models may also have the calibration set up already into the stl file and it might not match the settings of the resin.
The best tip I ever got was to dip your model in very hot water before taking off the supports. Most of the time it. Feels like themodel just pops out on its own
One thing i never understood before getting a cure station is you have to have your curing setup under the fume hood/tent system you have alongside you printer because the short curing duration and even the wash pumps a crap ton of alcohol into the air. I would not be surprised at all if there were a good amount of resin VOCs in those fumes as well.
I too like the Phozen printers I use a Phozen Sonic Mighty 8K and have the ultra on the way. I agree with Squidmar on this. My fails are rare and I know it’s my fault and know exactly why.
Squidmar, I love your creativity! not just in your painting, but in your videos as well. The drake meme with your head, and a creative way to ask for subs, instead of those dreadful, droning "like sub and share" monologs at the very beginning of the video. So I used my most important tool, that big red button :) Keep up the great work!
@@SquidmarMiniatures Are you going to do any review? I have been thinking about getting two if it's worth it. Can you still see printer lines on flatter surfaces?
@@JoshNoodleSoup the z resolution is the same as on the 4k but with double rida so more stability. BUT, the detail level is much higher than i expected. I'll make somewhat of a test video next year
Elegoo water washable clear blue, photon s, 18s/6layer burn in, 35um/5s light off delay/ 9s exposure/ 4.5mm lift, 115mm/m and 150mm/m ... Have not have a failed print since, minis turn out great
Putting them in the tank so when you use the clean tank function, the old supports become handles for you to pull the newly hardened layer out of the tank
All advice here is solid. However, worth noting, some printers benefit from uping the lift speeds. Both my Elegoo Saturn and Creality Halot One stopped giving any fails after doubling the lift spees.
Some good tips! Am I the only one that isn't afraid or stressed about resin? I mean, I'm not drinking it or rubbing it all over my body, just following the recommended safety guidelines. In modern day we probably interact with way worse chemicals frequently than resin. That or I'm dumb af and don't know enough to be worried...?
Recommended safety guidelines are basically 'don't get it on your skin/ingest it' and 'don't breathe too many fumes', so if you're avoiding both of those you really don't have much to worry about.
If you follow the basic guide it's alright. The issue starts when there are failures. I am dreading the day I find a ripped FEP and the resin getting everywhere including into the printer. Also gloves, mask and goggles should be standard. I got 1 splash of resin on my forearm, where the gloves did not reach and had a red and itchy resin burn for 4 weeks.
Would love to get into resin printing, but I'm paranoid about the fumes and my 2.5 yr old toddler getting messy with it. As a dad yourself, how do you protect your hobby space from tiny hands?
I have it in the studio, in a seperate room! But talking to danny from 3d printed tabletop and goobertown, apparently its not as toxic as one could think as long as the room is properly ventilated.
..and ten years later your kid gets asthma, all resin fumes are toxic and printers work for hours spewing them around, resin printer is something that you keep in separate workshop, not your hobby space.
@@randomnickify That's where the 'well ventilated' part comes in, so you don't have fumes lingering. There are a lot of solutions, but the easiest is probably a fan attached to the printer and some ducting out of the window
I run mine in the kitchen on the cooker, with the extractor hood fan running. If you want to be super sure you are getting all the fumes you can put plastic sheeting around the cooker hood down to the printer. TBH I find the printer cover keeps most of the fumes inside, you only ever get a slight smell when the cover is off.
I love my Sonic Mighty 4k, started with mechanical parts for engineering, but I've gone CRAZY with minis lately too! it doesn't help I can print like 15 at a time
HI on the miniature you where saying that we can recycle th supports but i didn't found this chapter on your video so how can we recycle the supports ? ( sorry for my english , I am french)
personally, i use an anycubic photon mono and primacreator value grey, and that works 99% of the time, but am looking to upgrade and will definitely be using peopoly on the phrozen mega 8k, seeing as that works for you
Never had any issues with 3D printing at all. Just make sure your resin has a temperature above 15 degrees celsius and no hardened particles inside and you're good. I actually think 3D printing your minis is less work than cleaning terrible forgeworld casts or building the puzzles that modern GW sprues are. Not to speak about the good old white metal.
I was putting together a box of Wyches and had to retrain myself to assembly line glue because the newer models are all so specific you can't do it. Every single marine has specific parts that go in a specific way and god forbid one arm get on a different model or something. Used to be able to put a tactical squad together in like 30 minutes. As someone who has put together a lot of Forge World and these new kits, 3d printed models are way, way easier, absolutely.
It's GW policy; out gamee, our rules,our minis !!! Been playing with those for last 20 or so years, but always kept green stuff at hand for mods. 3d printing just made all that obsolete.
Great video!! I know I'm just a very new baby channel, but I have a video on supporting that would be great for you to watch. It used to take me literally hours to support and I HATED IT!! I would post you a link, but YT won't let me, but the name of the video is called No More Fails and it's about supporting models super fast and SUPER easy! It definitely made my life easier. Keep up the awesome videos!! 😊
I agree with all the point except for pre-supported prints. Because I tend to upscale my prints and make them into display pieces and not game pieces the miscommunication between the slicing software and the 3d printer morphs the premade supports into literal walls of resin that are hard to break off, leave holes in the models and just make the whole thing unusable. I guess in the end it just depends on what you want to do with the sculpts.
This video made me look into phrozen as my possibly my first printer. But then realised the video is 2 years old and it seems like the printer market is constantly evolving. Living in sweden the most popular store online doesn't seem to sell them at all. Has any cubic surpassed them? Or should I go for the phrozen 8k S that seems reasonably priced, directly on their site?
Okay, your video makes it look like loot studios did not provide pre-supported miniatures at one point. I've been subscribed to them from about the beginning and they have always had some of the best supports during each release. You may not have meant to suggest that but it really looks like a ding against loot studios and I think they are one of the best out there.
I can't believe its almost over, these two weeks have flown by! There's only 36h left to order the H&S Squidmar Airbrush! Thanks all you beautiful people who decided to get one already! I cant believe how many of you have been excited about it - THANKS!
harder-squidmar.de/eng
Waiting patiently for mine to arrive, I cannot wait! Its a beautiful design and a great upgrade from my Badger 360. Although I had just decided against spending on a H&S then you changed my mind! It's all your fault Squidmar 😂
@@reefarolla32 haha sorry not sorry, you're gonna love it :)
I wonder if we will get any notification about that it has been shipped. I have zero information since I ordered on the very first day. Squidmar, do you have any info about that part?
Is this a good airbrush for a beginner?
@@GrafitTomi Check the website you ordered it from. There's an update on shipping under service/help tab. Long story short if you ordered on day one, your's will ship anywhere between yesterday and december 31.
I have a 2D printer and I always skip a generation when upgrading, so I’ll be patient and wait for the 4D printer
Loool
I hate you. I'm in physical pain from laughing so hard at that.
Do you still have your 0D printer?
Underrated
The good news, is that a 4D printer will let you make things retroactively.
Definitely recommend against using the included plastic spatulas. Use a rubber spatula and you won't scratch the fep. Also, use microfiber cloths to clean it!
I’m actually allergic to the fumes/gasses given off as resin is hardened in the printer. Took the better part of a year & many doctors visited to figure it out… so I have a printer but it’s at a friend’s & he prints whatever files I sent him. I’ve been a patreon of Titan Forge minis for over a year & have always been pleased with their designs & presupports.
That’s rough! I accidentally was too lax with my exposure early on and sensitized myself (had the full shebang, dried skin, blisters, etc) so now I break out if there’s even a bit of residue on my skin for a bit
Damn. hope y’all are doing OK.
What were your symptoms? I'm wondering if I'm in the same boat
Resin printers don't give off fumes when they cure... its just the smell of resin.
Did you by any chance not wear a respirator/not install proper ventilation for your printer? People seem to mostly understand you need gloves, but they just straight up fail to understand that breathing the fumes contained in uncured resin can make you develop systemic health problems and - like in your case - make them develop allergies, in turn making them unable to operate a resin printer ever again.
For anyone who didn't know, when running the clean sequence, when setting the seconds, press the actual number and it brings you to another screen where you can put in how long to expose without having to press the up or down button multiple times.
I have a Phrozen Mini 4K, I had issues with failed prints. Since I started warming my resin before printing I have had zero failed prints. Just leave the resin bottle in a bowl of warm water while you get everything setup and its warm enough in 5 minutes.
Its also worth mentioning I made one print with my Phrozen Mini 4K and hated the smell, long story short I cut a hole in the side of my printer cover, got some duct pipes and fans and piped it out of my window. I can now print and work in my office, not a single smell. Its amazing!
You saved me i dont have a sense of smell but my fam does so i keep getting hate and anger thrown at me, ya saved me
solid list! #1 was actually news to me, now I gotta see if any of my printers have a vat cleaning button!
Lol I havent cleaned my vat in 4 months just keep adding new stuff. Give it a stir and away you go. Even left it as an experiment for 3 weeks. Made ZERO difference to the print quality.
@@MrBizteck Same. My resin vat just gets a good stir, then topped off with some new resin and another good stirring, it's set. I only clean the vat when I have to, and even then, you can just run the LCD test to solidify the entire bottom and just peel that off along with all the little failures sticking to the FEP. It's pretty fast and easy to recover from failures this way!
@@MrBizteck I only clean when there's stuff stuck to the FEP :-)
It's in the menus , I have one on my epax 6 .
@@GoobertownHobbies Same here. I haven't really cleaned the tray in a year, just remove whatever gets stuck. Resin printing is somewhat situational and somewhat luck based. I never had the nasty problems that some people complain about.
@Squidmar Miniatures avoid using tissue paper when cleaning the fep and resin basen try using microfibre cloth instead to avoid scratches
Why? Not like tearing things up cost him anything. They'll just send another.
@@camojoe83 if the FEP gets scratched it's pretty annoying, plus it will mess with later prints. Replacing fep sheets is also a hassle.
I switched to water washable resin. So no more IPA less fumes quicker easier clean up. I have been getting great results with elegoo’s water washable resin.
Same here. The resin I use is virtually odour free as well
I have been printing with an ABS PLA printer for 3 years (scenery mainly), and I started printing with a resin printer a couple of months ago. I started with an elegoo mars 2K pro and a Mercury plus curing machine. I have been printing with water washable resin, and apart from calibration, the only issue I had was changing my VAT plastic (I followed a tutorial by Elegoo). That's it... I have 0 fail, and I printed 5L worth of resin, I am absolutely in love with my printer, and if they were more affordable I would buy a gigantic one to print my terrain with it.
My good old Enders 3 is a great printer, but I am always fixing, changing, tuning mechanical things (bed, extruder, tube, everything), a resin printer is litteraly no work at all. Put the resin in, get a supported model, press print... Done.
That trick with the leftover supports to aid in vat cleaning is going to save me so much hassle. No more digging around with a spatula and damaging the FEP. Thanks!
You can also carefully use your gloved knuckle on the underside of the FEP to rub and push the print, just enough to lift off a corner and hold it off the FEP while you get the scraper under the edge to lift. Takes a minute to get used to but good when you don't want to waste resin exposing the whole vat.
To add to your first tip, if you remove the build plate and set it in the vat while the clean mode is on it will stick to the plate and make removing it much easier
I'm with ya on the Phrozen, they are awesome, I got a Sonic Mini 4k, and you also should mention they are NOT a Chinese company, they are Taiwanese. Small difference, but it's important.
And the cleaning/curing station is awesome too. I have one of those too.
There won't be a difference in a couple months lmao
@@danzo5521 You are probably right, but I am still hopeful it won't happen.
@@Nephanor same here
They’re a Taiwanese company, not a West Taiwanese company? I’m sold on them for sure now.
@@bearonatricycle1082 "west Taiwanese" 😭🤣
Also a tip that improved my prints greatly: use PTFE lubricant on the FEP before pouring the resin in. This totally eliminated the problem of prints sticking to the FEP and extends the life of the FEP. Also, I use a water washable resin, and I use a flexible magnetic build plate. When cleaning the minis, I rinse them in a bucket, then I remove the supports, THEN I put them in the wash station. Gets the prints much cleaner, and keeps the wash liquid cleaner.
Any good alternatives? Haven't heard good things about teflon
I have had so bad results with water washable resin. A lot of times it started cracking months after the print...
@@manuelklein7627 this is the issue with water washable, its the trade off sadly.
IMO the best way to go about it as a newbie like what I did was doing my research before buying a 3d printer, find out what I needed and go out and buy it, have it set up and ready to go before you buy your printer.
In my experience with 3d printing most issues are caused by users. It is by far cheaper I've saved a ton of money myself already. Ive had mine a couple of months and had zero issues outside of the first couple of days sorting settings out.
I would recommend one of the cheaper curing stations meant for nail studios.
Just check that it has a function that allows to have the light on all the time.
On most of these curing boxes you have changeable UV light bulbs so you can replace burned out bulbs easily. Also most of them have a reflective surface all over their inside so no fiddling willth foil.
These boxes are quickly found on the internet.
My boyfriend and I have found this thing quite useful and we don't mind having to do a little adjustment in the minis position to get everything cured. It works for what we need and I guess it is a decent alternative between some diy contraption and a real curing station both in price and quality
I have a nail curing thingy, but needed a bigger curing station. So I built one by simply buying UV light strips for cheep like 10 dollars. Then I get a box, cover the inside with foil, and then stick the UV light strips inside. It's the ugliest yet the best thing I have ever made
I had the same issues until I switched to water washable resins. It is so much better imo.
Only the cleaning needs a bit more work, as it is only a mechanical cleaning, not an additional chemical process as you have with IPA. But getting rid of the IPA sets off the higher cost for the water washable resin and did much to keep me safe from any health related issues.
Please do not underestimate the dangers of the resin you are operating with. While IPA is a toxic chemical, resin contains way more toxic chemicals.
If you don't treat the resin like it is way more dangerous than the IPA you are endangering yourself, you need to protect your respiratory system and skin from absorbing the resin's VOCs at all times uncured resin is not contained fully airtight or ventilated, or you will develop system health problems in time.
Happy to hear you’re running with a wash and cure station. Makes that resin cleanup a lot better.
Yeah, what was the brand/model again, please?
Stupid question, as someone considering a cleaning station: are there any that include a cycle that agitated the wash fluid with the UV lights on? I'd like that to help clean alcohol a bit to extend its life.
@@rcrawford42 I know that the anycubic wash and cure station can't do that. You probably wouldn't want it in the cleaning container anyway because over time there is a lot of resin that builds up and would probably clog the the whole thing up. I always transfer the alcohol in a large glas jar and put that in the wash and cure machine without the turntable and clean the alcohol that way.
One tip a lot of people miss: CHECK YOUR ROOMS TEMPERATURE. Especially in Europe, it's getting cold these days. Most standard resins do need a working temperature of above 20°C, better 25°C. You can heat the resin up on a radiator beforehand, thus helping the print to stick in the beginning. In the process of printing, the resin will warm up due too the reaction while curing the resin. If raising the temperature is not an option, you will need to raise the exposure setting, to hit it longer with UV light. Optimally, do a "XP2 Validation Matrix" test print right before a larger, critical project.
homebrewers have a similar problem with temperature. You can buy electric heating belts that wrap around the vat for like $10 from homebrew supply stores
@@Serpsor good to know, will check it out!
@@Serpsor i was really confused and asking myself "why would dnd homebrew content creation have to do anything with temperature?"
Lichi is perfect for auto supports, i use it every time and with a 98% success rate. Another tip before curing put ur prints in hot water for 5 mins and the support practically fall off leaving no nubs or indents, then let dry before curing. These tricks have mad reson printing a breeze.
Phrozen printers ha e been awesome for me. I've had 3 brands and the Phrozen brand is the only one that worked the 1st time and have not given me any issues. The Phrozen 4K Aqua Grey is my go to resin now. It just works, doesn't smell and I have had zero fails with it. Great video.
Super late to the party, but I just got a printer recently, and thanks to your videos, and others around, I was so prepared. I've had 2 failures, both due to user error, but all of my prints have been amazing, really just due to following advice and calibrating. It's been so painfree. A friend of mine got into 3D printing a few years ago, and just became so jaded towards the whole process that he ended up getting rid of his printers, and I can't say I blame him, and if I had jumped on at the same time, it would totally be gathering dust right now, but the information out there is so much better than it was, and I am having the best time. Thanks for making cool videos like these
Got my first AnyCubic printer and Wash n Cure last March at the start of the pandemic. I've loved making my own minis so much, I upgraded to a newer Anycubic over the summer. Its amazing how much the tech in these things is changing year over year. When I bought my new one, Mono screens were newer and 4K was the hot up and coming tech. Not just 6 months later, everyone has 8K printers out. But honestly I love my current one, and the Wash n Cure is great. I can keep this printer for maybe 5 years and who knows what kind of crazy stuff will be out there by then.
I 100% agree with everything in this video. I started with an FDM and now I have been using a Phozen Mighty 4K and it would not be fun without the accessories like the Anycubic wash & cure, I’d also recommend the magnetic and steel plate from Wham Bam.
Men vilken guldklimp som dök upp bland mina föreslagna videos! Jag har precis börjat printa i resin, den här videon var kanon och gav mig många värdefulla tips! Stort tack!
Putting supports into the vat for the cleaning process is genius, I've almost punched a couple holes in FEP trying to pry that sheet up.
the lift speeds and first layer cure time was the first thing i ever did to fix my failed prints on elegoo mars 2 mono. a great printer for a great price
I love the Anycubic Mono X! Also, the wash and cure is amazing! It was a huge upgrade from the goofy plastic containers I was using lol. If you get/have a Mono X, I recommend you spend a whopping 15 for a BIQU flexible build plate. Phenomenal!!
With lift speeds you can actually go the other way, with very fast settings (180mm/min+) that reduce both the force and time, though slow speeds are more reliable. There's a grey zone of 'medium' speeds between 60-180mm/min that have the largest peel forces. It's a bit like ripping off a bandage - you either want to go really fast or really slow.
Thats what I found with the Saturn, initially default settings caused constant fails to the point where I almost gave up, went slower (and also anyone with a Saturn, increase your lift distance, those big FEPs flex a lot!) Finally decided to go fast instead and it was just as good. Its only the middle speeds that cause issues.
@@davidmccurdy8911 same here. Ever since going to 185mm (or 180, not sure) I have significantly less fails and whats even cooler, the prints are stupid fast. Printed out a couple modular 28mm Minis (legs and upper body seperated) in under an hour.
You really have to have your printer calibrated perfectly for vroom settings to not get fails. Not that you shouldn’t have that done anyway, but a lot of people don’t and that’s why they have problems with fast lift speeds.
@@Chef_PC I think I have been super lucky then, I set them to the Sirya tech settings (even though I use Elegoo resin) ramped up the speed and off I went.
I have had more problems over the last few days but I am putting that down to changing the mainboard so I had the top off so need to get my levelling just right again
@@davidmccurdy8911 I used vroom for a few months before my screen burned out (not likely related), and have just now gotten back to it. Fresh resin and having the printer dialed in really helps out everything though. I use Siraya Navy now almost exclusively because it’s moderately priced and I’ve had fewer fails than any of the other brands, especially Elegoo.
Bonus tip: YES! It took me forever to figure out how impactful lift speed can be when I first started 3D printing! None of the typical stuff you'll find on starting 3D printing talks about it, but it is, IMO, probably 80% of the cause of failed prints. Just because everyone has already covered supports, temp, location, etc. to death.
Following that is hollowing, but that's another discussion entirely.
Me and my gf just did our first test print on our mini 4k, the rook came out great and I CANNOT WAIT to start throwing models in. One thing I would love is maybe a “you got a 3D printer now what” video, I feel like I have the world at my fingers and I don’t know where to grab on.
you should do a complete cure of the residues before throwing them into the garbage can. you know that the resin can be toxic both for human beings and for plants and animals.
He doesn't care, and none of these dudes ever mention stuff like that. Fuck, I've seen some minitard just dump his wash water down the drain in a vid about water washables. Ah well, it will be their families, water systems, and pets getting poisoned and growing cancer, not mine.
I don't empty the vat when I have a failed print. I use a plastic razor blade and take it off in one clean piece when possible. Once removed I literally stick my fingers in the resin for any strays. I print everyday and this method works everytime. No need to take the vat off and damage the film. Been printing for 4 months with two machines and no issues.
I hope you mean gloved fingers
@@Doodlebob563 I'll try to keep it at a 4 weeks long rash from resin burn on my arm
I'm using Elegoos water washable resin and I find that fantastic.
Yep thats my go to also
@@MrBizteck I think they’ve recently improved the formula.
This video is so perfect. I just purchased my first 3D printer and I am a noob. This helped so much!
Yeah I'm in the same boat, mine just arrived about an hour ago!
Great list. I was a little surprised about the complaints though. I've been FDM printing for over 3 years and SLA printing for about two months but no matter what printer or material I've ever used, I always managed to get a print to complete successfully. When it actually failed, it was my fault because I forgot to wipe the bed clean of my finger prints (with FDM printer) or forgot to support an isle on an SLA print, etc.
If your fep keeps building pools of cured resin over the duration of the print try these things one at a time:
clean resin by straining it, clean fep with alcohol and lint-free tissue, reduce exposure times, check fep for scratches or ghost mark and replace it as needed,, reduce laser intensity from 100% in 5-10% increments.
Hope that helps someone.
Add more helpful methods if you’ve got them.
Oh nice, I was thinking about getting a 3D printer to create scenic bases for my competition pieces. Nice!
Thanks for the tips, haven’t got a printer yet but this is amazing info to have when I finally drop for my dream printing
I fnn love your videoediting nowadays, your videos are soo fun to watch, bäst är du mannnnn!
As a space scale model builder I often use old support structures as "girders" in spaceship wreckage as the background of a diorama.
Great for stuff like Gundams.
I have a Phrozen Sonic Mini 4k, and I can't recommend getting a Wham Bam magnetic plate for it enough. Getting prints off the plate is *so* much easier now, and the only reason I've had to use a scraper since has been to remove prints that failed cause it's too cold out. Go slow, keep the resin warm, and get magnetic plates. Made me fall in love with printing.
I really considered getting one of those until I got a super cheap solution. "FOSHIO 2PCS Plastic Razor Scrapers" still using the first blade and it gets all the prints off the metal plate easily. About $12 lifetime supply if blades. safe for my build plate and it just works.
@@nathangerardy2669 I've used those at work and they're great, but i find the plate is easier/faster, and I don't have to worry about pre-supported files that are so small they'll fall through the mesh of my wash+cure machine.
Slick video dude! And packed full of useful tips, very useful for someone who already has a printer but is put off by the experience thus far
The technology has come so far over just the last few years, I'm curious to try 3D printing myself. Also, love your uninterested face in all the random images 🤣
The editing in this video was fire.
The resin fumes are poisonous so the smell help you identify if you have proper ventilation
Great video. I just made my 1st print last night and it was successful. I made a whole build plate full of bits using lychee 3. Printed on my anycubic Photon s I got for 99 dollars. I got it in the wash right now and printing a second copy. Planning a 3rd print as we speak.
ALot you say speaks so true to me! when a print is failing I just give up on life!
OOOOOH ALMIGHTY IKEA SAVING EVERYONE'S LIVES.
Also the editing was soo much fun as well
Lychee, auto supports, works 95% of the time, you can tweak the auto support settings. For smaller things I tend to use the light supports on a high or ultra density, or just mediums on bigger things.
Auto supports have gotten a LOT better with the more recent releases. Slower lift speeds are the first thing I will try if I get a failed print even if it adds an hour or two to your print.
Thank you very much for the tips! 🎉
Great list! I've been on the fence for a while about a wash and cure station. Hearing it here sounds like a solid upgrade from my IPA buckets
Do yourself a favor, especially if you own your house: create a negative pressure setup. Enclose the printer in a grow-box made out of nylon material (like a tent). Many grow-boxes come with openings for 4" ventilation hoses. Locate the printer against an exterior wall, and have a handyman come and install a drier vent in that wall, up somewhat so that it's above your setup. Then, get an inline fan for a 4" ventilation hose, and connect the growbox to the fan and from the fan to the vent.
PROBLEM SOLVED.
Especially if you have animals and/or small children, the fumes from VOCs are really, really bad.
Also, when you're dealing with the print, cleaning the vat, etc, get a mask with a filter capable of filtering out the vapors. The more you spare yourself the fumes, the better your experience will be with the hobby.
Editing on this video is on another level. Great!
That last tip is going to get me to try another print this weekend.
I bought a halot mage and have printed some Warhammer models and the printer works great but my cureing station is a cardboard box with tinfoil on the inside and a hole on the top for a uv bulb
I just upgraded to the Elegoo Mercury was and cure station. It makes the process SO MUCH easier.
Legit good advice in here and all nice and summarized in bite sized chunks :) Love it.
I have always been iffy on the Phrozen models ever since it came out tht their rail systems were made out of a lower end quality and tend to bend. (which is extremely BAD)
But looking at the newer (and especially the bigger) models, it might be that they fixed those issues.
I might give them a try later.
As for cleaning models, get yourself a nice and big ultrasonic cleaner for like 100 bucks (+- 10 litres), pop in some mr clean (cheaper than pure IPA and works just as good if not better) and let it run. You get a deep and intense cleaning and you can even heat the liquid to a set temperature, which helps with removing supports afterwards.
You should buy a silicon spatula (slikkepott) to clean the fep. Avoids scratching the fep and you can easier scrape out all the resin left in there.
Yes Greg at 3d printing pro is literally a genius when it comes to these machines. Saved my printer from the gumtree! Love this vid squid! Keep up the good work. Wish I could paint as well as you!
Thanks for the advice for the lifting speed, it will help my Fep film i think! thank you again i will try it this weekend!
Give your editor a raise! Great video.
Thant last tip , run 140mm lift speeds called zoom settings and i have sonic mini 4k not had a fail since and halved my print times. much slower on the mighty though.
The resin failing might be setings and if it's not setings it might be temperature that is the problem, some resin are big babies when it comes to temperature, the work in the goldilocks range not to hot, not to cold, just right if the setings are aces then try heating up the build plate for better sticking, if you have temp controle in the printing room then read up on the just right temp and set it to that~ It might make your life all sunshine and unicorn farts~
I don't have a lot of experience but i bought the reprapper 203 water washable resin and it has been fantastic
Danny is awesome dude!!
I have an Elegoo mars 2 mono that i love. I use Elegoo black resin and have the calibration charts for the various colors of resin manufactured by Elegoo. Yes colors do matter and each has its own calibrations. I haven't had a failed print in a year or more now. The main thing is keeping the vat deposit free and changing the FEP every 50 prints or so. I use chitubox slicer and i keep an eye on the calibration settings as sometimes pre-supported models may also have the calibration set up already into the stl file and it might not match the settings of the resin.
mighty 4k*
and
Mega 8k *
@3:08 FTFY ;)
Great video and very informative. Keep up the good work.
Also, no support or "print in place" minis are just so nice.
Can you make a video on how to use and clean the new squidbrush? (the airbrush)
The best tip I ever got was to dip your model in very hot water before taking off the supports. Most of the time it. Feels like themodel just pops out on its own
One thing i never understood before getting a cure station is you have to have your curing setup under the fume hood/tent system you have alongside you printer because the short curing duration and even the wash pumps a crap ton of alcohol into the air. I would not be surprised at all if there were a good amount of resin VOCs in those fumes as well.
I too like the Phozen printers I use a Phozen Sonic Mighty 8K and have the ultra on the way. I agree with Squidmar on this. My fails are rare and I know it’s my fault and know exactly why.
Squidmar, I love your creativity! not just in your painting, but in your videos as well. The drake meme with your head, and a creative way to ask for subs, instead of those dreadful, droning "like sub and share" monologs at the very beginning of the video. So I used my most important tool, that big red button :) Keep up the great work!
Oh my God, I had to laugh at your home made solutions. Straight up what I used or am moving from. Grymt.
great video, printing orange resin is very very difficult as orange is a color which filters out UV, maybe try same resin in other colors!
So hyped for the Phrozen sonic mini 8k. Been getting each version of the Phrozen Sonic Minis since they first came out, great printer.
got it this week after we finished this video... OMG its good!
@@SquidmarMiniatures Are you going to do any review? I have been thinking about getting two if it's worth it. Can you still see printer lines on flatter surfaces?
@@JoshNoodleSoup the z resolution is the same as on the 4k but with double rida so more stability. BUT, the detail level is much higher than i expected. I'll make somewhat of a test video next year
Elegoo water washable clear blue, photon s, 18s/6layer burn in, 35um/5s light off delay/ 9s exposure/ 4.5mm lift, 115mm/m and 150mm/m ... Have not have a failed print since, minis turn out great
Did i miss something in this video.....what are we saving the supports for?
Putting them in the tank so when you use the clean tank function, the old supports become handles for you to pull the newly hardened layer out of the tank
Phrozen Mini4k, and Aquagrey 4k resin. 2 Calibration prints and I've had like a 98% success rate ever since.
All advice here is solid. However, worth noting, some printers benefit from uping the lift speeds. Both my Elegoo Saturn and Creality Halot One stopped giving any fails after doubling the lift spees.
Ooo… the supports idea is a HUGE win!! Didn’t think of doing that!! This makes printing even better just with that simple thing!!
I know right!!!
I would love to get into 3d printing. I’m hoping that in the near future the basic ones will be so cheap you can’t help but buy one!
You can get a 2k one for the cost of a couple of gw products.
Thx for your Videos. Waiting for some Manta News :-) -
Some good tips!
Am I the only one that isn't afraid or stressed about resin? I mean, I'm not drinking it or rubbing it all over my body, just following the recommended safety guidelines. In modern day we probably interact with way worse chemicals frequently than resin.
That or I'm dumb af and don't know enough to be worried...?
Recommended safety guidelines are basically 'don't get it on your skin/ingest it' and 'don't breathe too many fumes', so if you're avoiding both of those you really don't have much to worry about.
If you follow the basic guide it's alright. The issue starts when there are failures. I am dreading the day I find a ripped FEP and the resin getting everywhere including into the printer.
Also gloves, mask and goggles should be standard.
I got 1 splash of resin on my forearm, where the gloves did not reach and had a red and itchy resin burn for 4 weeks.
Hi,
Nice 1 squidy! I'll sure be trying out lowering that liftspeed ;-)
Happy Holidays
Cheers
Evel
Would love to get into resin printing, but I'm paranoid about the fumes and my 2.5 yr old toddler getting messy with it. As a dad yourself, how do you protect your hobby space from tiny hands?
I have it in the studio, in a seperate room! But talking to danny from 3d printed tabletop and goobertown, apparently its not as toxic as one could think as long as the room is properly ventilated.
..and ten years later your kid gets asthma, all resin fumes are toxic and printers work for hours spewing them around, resin printer is something that you keep in separate workshop, not your hobby space.
@@randomnickify That's where the 'well ventilated' part comes in, so you don't have fumes lingering. There are a lot of solutions, but the easiest is probably a fan attached to the printer and some ducting out of the window
... ever heard of a door, dude?
I run mine in the kitchen on the cooker, with the extractor hood fan running. If you want to be super sure you are getting all the fumes you can put plastic sheeting around the cooker hood down to the printer. TBH I find the printer cover keeps most of the fumes inside, you only ever get a slight smell when the cover is off.
I love my Sonic Mighty 4k, started with mechanical parts for engineering, but I've gone CRAZY with minis lately too! it doesn't help I can print like 15 at a time
HI on the miniature you where saying that we can recycle th supports but i didn't found this chapter on your video so how can we recycle the supports ? ( sorry for my english , I am french)
Replacing the FEP with the NFEP is much better, the difference is enormous, I stopped having failures even with a lifting speed of 180 mm, try it
personally, i use an anycubic photon mono and primacreator value grey, and that works 99% of the time, but am looking to upgrade and will definitely be using peopoly on the phrozen mega 8k, seeing as that works for you
Never had any issues with 3D printing at all. Just make sure your resin has a temperature above 15 degrees celsius and no hardened particles inside and you're good. I actually think 3D printing your minis is less work than cleaning terrible forgeworld casts or building the puzzles that modern GW sprues are. Not to speak about the good old white metal.
I was putting together a box of Wyches and had to retrain myself to assembly line glue because the newer models are all so specific you can't do it. Every single marine has specific parts that go in a specific way and god forbid one arm get on a different model or something. Used to be able to put a tactical squad together in like 30 minutes.
As someone who has put together a lot of Forge World and these new kits, 3d printed models are way, way easier, absolutely.
It's GW policy; out gamee, our rules,our minis !!! Been playing with those for last 20 or so years, but always kept green stuff at hand for mods. 3d printing just made all that obsolete.
Great video!! I know I'm just a very new baby channel, but I have a video on supporting that would be great for you to watch. It used to take me literally hours to support and I HATED IT!! I would post you a link, but YT won't let me, but the name of the video is called No More Fails and it's about supporting models super fast and SUPER easy! It definitely made my life easier. Keep up the awesome videos!! 😊
I agree with all the point except for pre-supported prints. Because I tend to upscale my prints and make them into display pieces and not game pieces the miscommunication between the slicing software and the 3d printer morphs the premade supports into literal walls of resin that are hard to break off, leave holes in the models and just make the whole thing unusable.
I guess in the end it just depends on what you want to do with the sculpts.
I love the animation in this video
This video made me look into phrozen as my possibly my first printer. But then realised the video is 2 years old and it seems like the printer market is constantly evolving. Living in sweden the most popular store online doesn't seem to sell them at all. Has any cubic surpassed them? Or should I go for the phrozen 8k S that seems reasonably priced, directly on their site?
Funny, I actually really enjoy all of this maker-process you say you hate ^^. Maybe except for the mess...
Okay, your video makes it look like loot studios did not provide pre-supported miniatures at one point. I've been subscribed to them from about the beginning and they have always had some of the best supports during each release. You may not have meant to suggest that but it really looks like a ding against loot studios and I think they are one of the best out there.
if you listen to what i say you hear that's not what i say, i've praised loot in plenty videos before