2023 and still helping people 😊 thank you sm ! I designed a glider but needed just abit more weight up front this helps so much
Straight to the point and exactly what I was looking for. Thanks for your help 👍
Thank you, this is exactly what I was looking for :)
I like short videos which are on point 👍🏻 nice
Very helpful and to the point, well done!
Thank you, well explained and direct to the point.
thank you this was just what i was looking for
amazing thank you so much!
thank you
Thanks, thanks, thanks.... Love you. 😘
Great explanation!
Thank you for this!
Thank you so much.
thank you well explained
great!!!!
The most annoying thing about Prusa slicer is that it wont let you use 100% infill with any pattern other than rectilinear. They claim it wont work. Meanwhile you can go over to CURA and it works great with ANY infill.
I saw that. When you put infill 100% it is supposed to fill everywhere any way so does pattern matter? Also, why do you need 100% infill? If you need to make the pieces stronger, try to increase the numbers of shells.
@@gubutek I require 100% infill to ensure maximum strength for the part. This isn't about printing small decorations; I need durability. While increasing shells can enhance surface strength, the core of the part remains weak with sparse infill.
Over time, repeated stress on the perimeters can result in failure. Moreover, thin sections with added perimeters essentially become all perimeter, compromising structural integrity.
@@gubutek I require 100% infill to ensure maximum strength for the part. I’m not printing toys; I need durability and for the parts to be solid. As for the infill pattern, it does matter even at 100% infill. Think of how a lattice of a material affects its properties. Same concept here. A 3d printed part is never completely solid even at 100% infill there are still microscopic gaps. The way the plastic is bonded together, even in a solid has an effect on its over all strength.
While increasing shells can enhance surface strength, the core of the part remains weak with sparse infill. Over time, repeated stress on the perimeters can result in failure. Moreover, thin sections with added perimeters essentially become all perimeter, this is not optimal of you want strength in all directions.
Prusa doesn’t seem to understand this, likely due to the fact all they print are printer parts,bobbles and trinket’s. In that case, maximizing strength in every conceivable way is not something they care about.
I understand your concern. It is true that the pattern of infill have effect on directional strength of the piece. What printer do you have? Did you try with other slicers, as you said the CURA works. Try ORCA slicer as well. Let me know if you manage to do it. Cheers!
thank you
This, Sir, is the proper information.
Glad it was helpful!