Dan Dubeau
Ultra Member
IMO temperature is pretty critical for good results. It's one of the reasons my printers don't see much use in the winter. I normally bring my little side arm kingroon upstairs and run it on the kitchen table, but downstairs is much colder and I get too many print fails. Resin printing is a non starter down there in the winter. When I get around to moving my workbench into the utility room, I am building a heated and vented enclosure for them all, with a nice stable granite top so I don't have to keep jacking with level etc.
A fully enclosed core xy printer like that one solves a lot of the issues that plague the old I3 style printers. I'm not convinced you could stick it anywhere and be successful though.
I have a few different type heater projects in various stages of completion for the resin printer that I could probably wrap up in a weekend, but they've been sitting there for almost 2 years lol. I bought a hair straightener from a thrift store, and fixed the heating elements to the side of a resin vat, and it works great, But it's a spaghetti mess and I need to clean it all up and sort out a better thermostat and control. Then I thought casting my own resin vats in aluminum, with a space for a cartridge heater would be better and cleaner (and perhaps marketable.....), so I got started down that path......but halfway down I stumbled on a small standalone heater project that just sits inside the enclosure and ordered those parts to build it instead, and that's where I sit......It's on the workbench somewhere.....
A fully enclosed core xy printer like that one solves a lot of the issues that plague the old I3 style printers. I'm not convinced you could stick it anywhere and be successful though.
I have a few different type heater projects in various stages of completion for the resin printer that I could probably wrap up in a weekend, but they've been sitting there for almost 2 years lol. I bought a hair straightener from a thrift store, and fixed the heating elements to the side of a resin vat, and it works great, But it's a spaghetti mess and I need to clean it all up and sort out a better thermostat and control. Then I thought casting my own resin vats in aluminum, with a space for a cartridge heater would be better and cleaner (and perhaps marketable.....), so I got started down that path......but halfway down I stumbled on a small standalone heater project that just sits inside the enclosure and ordered those parts to build it instead, and that's where I sit......It's on the workbench somewhere.....