On the heated bed.

A place to show what you are building, altering, kit bashing etc.
User avatar
Stese
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 9:26 pm
Location: Wrexham, UK
Contact:

On the heated bed.

#1

Post by Stese »

I've talked about getting a 3d printer before, and finally got one. For anyone interested its a Creality Ender 3 Pro.

On the bed today is the front wall of a loco shed.



Image
Father, IT Guy, HO/OO Modeler.
User avatar
Stese
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 9:26 pm
Location: Wrexham, UK
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#2

Post by Stese »

Previously printed

2 sets of doors


Image

Some downpipes...


Image
Father, IT Guy, HO/OO Modeler.
User avatar
Stese
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 9:26 pm
Location: Wrexham, UK
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#3

Post by Stese »

Previously printed...

2 sets of doors

Image

Some downpipes...

Image

and some chimney stacks..

Image
Father, IT Guy, HO/OO Modeler.
User avatar
Mr Bones
Posts: 692
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2018 9:24 pm
Location: Canterbury Area
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#4

Post by Mr Bones »

Impressive. Expensive to run?
And the Lord said unto John “Come forth and receive eternal life”, but John came fifth and won a toaster!
sandy
Posts: 619
Joined: Sat Feb 15, 2020 11:05 pm
Location: Gretna Scotland
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#5

Post by sandy »

I am interested in this, it seems to be a very useful tool. I notice that the coils used to make the print are about £20 to £30 each. About how much of a coil did it take to print the blue doors. The price I got was Amazon.
Sandy
User avatar
Stese
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 9:26 pm
Location: Wrexham, UK
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#6

Post by Stese »

Hi Both,

i'm not sure on the electric costs to run it, i'll check out the specs of the heating elements and calculate it.

As for filament costs, £25 seems to be the average cost for 1kg of filament. 1kg ~= 330m.

The doors used around 4g or 1.47m of filament. took approx 44minutes to print.

There were a number of failed prints using less than 1g each, but as long as you monitor the first layer, your losses should be minimal.

The wall that is on the bed now reports 22g or 7.47m. Currently at 3 hours and i'm expecting another hour.

(could an admin delete the double post? thanks)
Father, IT Guy, HO/OO Modeler.
User avatar
Stese
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 9:26 pm
Location: Wrexham, UK
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#7

Post by Stese »

and heres the finished wall...

Image

with the doors...

Image
Father, IT Guy, HO/OO Modeler.
User avatar
teedoubleudee
Posts: 1116
Joined: Fri Oct 05, 2018 2:53 pm
Location: Downham Market
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#8

Post by teedoubleudee »

Wow, they look great!
Most people are shocked when they find out how bad I am as an electrician
Davreb05
Posts: 42
Joined: Fri Oct 05, 2018 6:57 am
Location: Luton Bedfordshire
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#9

Post by Davreb05 »

Hi
My son has one of these printers, they don't seem very expensive to run. He
prints stuff for cosplay outfits, the longest time he has been printing something
was 53 hours, just make sure the first few layers print ok them just leave it running.
No problems with it so far, as long as the print bed is a good temperature.
David.
Tricky Dicky
Posts: 377
Joined: Fri Oct 05, 2018 6:49 pm
Contact:

Re: On the heated bed.

#10

Post by Tricky Dicky »

Hi Stese

How good is the Ender 3 Pro regards the layer lines, looking at the smooth bits on your prints faint lines are visible but look like a good primer coat would conceal them? Would you use it to produce a print that had smooth sides say a loco tender?

Richard
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest