Slicing 3D Print Files: Difference between revisions

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Before we go into the settings you'll need to change in Cura, let's take a look at the effect of two of these settings: brim and support.
Before we go into the settings you'll need to change in Cura, let's take a look at the effect of two of these settings: brim and support.


<span style="float:left;">{{#widget:YouTube|id=HVdvKfIHtS0|width=560|height=315|float=right}}</span>
<span style="float:left;margin-right:10px;">{{#widget:YouTube|id=HVdvKfIHtS0|width=560|height=315|float=right}}</span>
Notice that the legs do not stay in place without a brim, which is just a series of circles made by the printer to give the model stronger hold to the bed. These are easily removed after printing.
Notice that the legs do not stay in place without a brim, which is just a series of circles made by the printer to give the model stronger hold to the bed. These are easily removed after printing.



Revision as of 15:57, 25 April 2017

Model sliced in Cura

You have found or created a 3D model and saved it as an .stl file.

The next step is to slice the file into layers that the 3D printer will follow when creating your object. The gif to the left illustrates the layers that your model will be sliced into. Notice the blue colored support under the handle; without that, the handle would have nothing supporting it during printing. The video below shows us what can happen without proper support.

Setup Cura

  1. Download and install or open Cura Cura icon. (Note: We must use an older edition, 15.04.6, at the school)
  2. On first install, you'll need to set up the machine. Choose PrintrBot, then Play when prompted
  3. Download settings file here. (It is safe; I made it)
  4. Go to "File," select "Open Profile," then open the settings file you downloaded

How It Works

Before we go into the settings you'll need to change in Cura, let's take a look at the effect of two of these settings: brim and support.

Notice that the legs do not stay in place without a brim, which is just a series of circles made by the printer to give the model stronger hold to the bed. These are easily removed after printing.

Even with a set of brims, this model fails to print properly because the horse's stomach has no support. The melted plastic just droops into a spaghetti mess.

With brims and support, however, the horse prints just fine. Like the brim, support structures can be easily removed from the model after printing.

Note that support is not always needed! A pyramid has no overhanging pieces, so does not need to have support. You can turn off these settings in Cura on the left menu.

  1. Layer height should be .26
  2. Shell thickness is always set to multiples of the nozzle size (.4 mm in this case), so reduce from 1.2mm to .8mm
  3. Reduce fill density to 10%
  4. Support type should be "Everywhere." This support will hold up any part that doesn't start on the bed. In the case of your name tags, it is the torus
  5. Platform adhesion type should say "Brim"
  6. Click your model, then play with the three tools on the bottom. The middle one scales the model
  7. Pay attention to the time it will take to print your model; 30 minutes is fine. If it takes much longer, scale the file down. If it is really short, scale it up

Check the Quality

  1. With the model selected, click View Mode in the top right, and choose Layer
  2. This shows the layers created by the slicer. Can you read the letters? If not, scale up your badge. If you scale it to the max and still can't read it, rebuild the badge with larger text

Save the .gcode File

  1. Press the save button on the middle top, and name your file with your name, a description, and the color you want, e.g. paul badge black.gcode

Next up: Using OctoPrint