3D Drucker?

Hi, ich hätte gerne einen 3D Drucker, habe allerdings nicht genügend Platz in meiner Wohnung und müsste diesen dann in den Keller verfrachten. Allerdings ist die Luftfeuchtigkeit höher als logischerweise in einer Wohnung. Macht das arg viel aus. Ich weiss das man die Filaments keiner hohen Luftfeuchtigkeit aussetzen soll, aber wie verhält sich das während dem Druck?

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volker79
1 year ago

Generally, the cellar is not a big problem.

If you take a printer with open space (like most “bed thrusters” of the i3 design like the Prusa i3, Creality Ender series and their Clone of Anycubic and Co… and some more favorable dice), it is of course better to note that the basement is usually cooler (which is for materials with a tendency to “warping”, i.e. deformation on cooling, worse), but you also have less air-pulling (which is in relation to war). In the case of a closed installation space (housed bed pusher, most dice), this is not a topic.

Regarding humidity: PLA is not even so hygroscopic. Unpack, print (also 12 hours or so), pack in again, is good. In the case of highly hygroscopic materials (ABS is already somewhat more critical, PETG or TPU draws proper moisture), it is recommended to keep the filament dry even during the pressure. Whether you are in the air-conditioned living room, in the unconditioned hobby room or in the steam sauna.

To do this, you can look at various tutorials on Youtube, how to build dry boxes, from which you can print directly (such a transparent storage box from the building market, a self-printed rolling mechanism, fittings and PTFE hose, a hygrometer to monitor the humidity and a bunch of silica gel bags), then you can easily print directly from the box and the filament remains dry during storage.