I’m curious if anyone uses sandblasting for cleaning up their prints. If not, what’s your favorite way to clean them up?

  • Remy Rose
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    3 年前

    At my work we occasionally use a vibratory tumbler for that

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      3 年前

      Sanding with loosenmedia :)

      I suspect airblasting is going to be too aggressive for plastic (or perhaps more accurately too uneven,). But a vibe tank is usually just right.

      Another that can can be made with printed parts and a motor is a rock tumbler. Slower, sure, but it has the advantage of easy printing.

      Personally, I usually just sand things with a sponge block or scraps of sand paper.

      • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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        3 年前

        Have you made a printed rock tumbler? I am somewhat considering making one for my kids, but don’t know how long the container would last.

        • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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          3 年前

          I’ve… not. I just remember playing with one as a kid. It was literally just a motor with a gear train to make it go slowish and a plastic jar.

          Edit: wow. Rock tumblers have gotten expensive…this is now gonna have to be a back-burner project, me thinks.

            • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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              3 年前

              The ones I’m seeing are like 60-500, no way my parents would have dropped that for a toy. (Specifically one that lasted of 2 weeks,)

              • exploding_whale@lemmy.ml
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                3 年前

                Aside from that one tiny cheap toy in the sears catalog backnin the day, my recollection was starting price was around $250 for any tumbler(dad was considering them for years is the only reason I have any recollection). The $52 Harbor freight option is an impressive deal especially considering a few decades of inflation. I’m not say they were ever affordable toys, just that they are more affordable than they used to be. Size is a pretty big limitation on most readily available ones below the $500 mark.

                • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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                  3 年前

                  Yeah… it probably was thebsears toy.

                  That said the only part that would likely wear is the drum, which, if you can print one, you can print more, heh.

                  • exploding_whale@lemmy.ml
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                    3 年前

                    I think print one and apply a castable coating like urethane or maybe plastigip to the inside could be pretty long lasting.

        • exploding_whale@lemmy.ml
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          3 年前

          Might be worth trying a plastidip or some sort of urethane or rubberized coating on the inside. And the a big rubberband tire on the rollers That would make it last longer and be repairable.