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    Industrial 3D printer designed & made in NZ

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved
    My Duet controlled machine
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    • nz_andyundefined
      nz_andy
      last edited by nz_andy

      This is a duet wifi controlled machine.
      0_1567848993107_20190906_082711.jpg

      A ground up design, you can see more on our Instagram. (But still not showing much due to IP)

      The ABS print pictured below is 500mm wide, printed at 0.25mm layer height with a 0.4mm nozzle. (See nozzle top left of picture) Parts come out very flat, much better than our current off-the-shelf heated chamber machines.
      0_1567849096107_toyota racing 3D print enging head.jpg
      It seemed a bit crazy at the time to design and make our own machines but, this machine produces parts a level up on what we currently do and a lot faster.

      Have found Duet Wifi a great platform to work with, we are using external drives via the extension header.

      https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
      https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

      T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • Christoph13524undefined
        Christoph13524
        last edited by Christoph13524

        Nice ABS prints!
        What's the chamber temperature?
        And is the bed heated? When yes, is it as high as the chamber temperature is?

        Printing with an UMO+
        Duet 2 WiFi 1.04

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • T3P3Tonyundefined
          T3P3Tony administrators @nz_andy
          last edited by

          @nz_andy thanks for sharing, looking forward to adding you guys to the list of Duet controlled machines!

          www.duet3d.com

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • nz_andyundefined
            nz_andy
            last edited by

            A short video showing this machine running.

            https://youtu.be/iDEyjMv7538

            https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
            https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

            Phaedruxundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • Phaedruxundefined
              Phaedrux Moderator @nz_andy
              last edited by

              @nz_andy Very fast! But what is the brief pause before the travel move? Retraction?

              Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • nz_andyundefined
                nz_andy
                last edited by

                Hi Christoph, that is retraction, so some tweaking to do.
                It is the accuracy at speed that is important don't you think, many printers can run fast but start to round out corners etc, especially when you have a big printer like this, 520x520x600 build heated chamber.
                We are printing 470mm long ABS parts that shrink 2mm on cool-down and end up with 0.2mm end to end accuracy.

                This printer uses lead screws, this would seem a bit crazy to some people, Our gantry and print head are very light, custom machined and titanium 3D printed print head. We have not spared expense as this is our workhorse. Our V2 printer is nearly finished now.

                Answering your earlier questions, we do have heated bed, but it was not turned on for this print. Chamber at 85degC with vacuum bed on PEI.

                https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • nz_andyundefined
                  nz_andy
                  last edited by

                  A few pictures of some big prints we did last year on this machine, these are ABS:

                  20190917_132238.jpg

                  20190918_174405.jpg

                  20190916_081927.jpg

                  https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                  https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                  richardmckennaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • fmaundefined
                    fma
                    last edited by

                    Very impressive!

                    Frédéric

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • richardmckennaundefined
                      richardmckenna @nz_andy
                      last edited by

                      @nz_andy wow! How many parts is that top one made up of and any idea what it weighs?

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • nz_andyundefined
                        nz_andy
                        last edited by

                        That big print was about 18KG or 40lb, it was about 12 parts, we could have done it in 6 parts but it was more economic to break it up more. The finish is a bead blast before painting.

                        https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                        https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • nz_andyundefined
                          nz_andy
                          last edited by

                          A few pictures of our V2 machine. the printer is about 6.5ft tall.

                          It has heated filament chamber and auto filament change over.
                          Heated bed is 1kw, chamber is 5kw

                          PDM QuickForm 500 3D printer (2).jpg

                          Big 3D print pipe.jpg

                          https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                          https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Phaedruxundefined
                            Phaedrux Moderator
                            last edited by

                            It's a beast! Thanks for sharing.

                            Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • jens55undefined
                              jens55
                              last edited by

                              Impressive! .... are there any projections on retail price (afraid to ask but what the hell)

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • nz_andyundefined
                                nz_andy
                                last edited by

                                Thanks for the encouragement. At this point we are just making machines for our own use and need more to keep up with our printing work.
                                We have had a few people ask lately and maybe we should consider selling these because of the amount of time that has gone into the design. At a guess it would be about 80K USD for one of these.

                                https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                                https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                                aprzundefined jens55undefined 3DPMicroundefined 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • aprzundefined
                                  aprz @nz_andy
                                  last edited by

                                  @nz_andy said in Industrial 3D printer designed & made in NZ:

                                  Thanks for the encouragement. At this point we are just making machines for our own use and need more to keep up with our printing work.
                                  We have had a few people ask lately and maybe we should consider selling these because of the amount of time that has gone into the design. At a guess it would be about 80K USD for one of these.

                                  Wow great job. Those parts came out great.👍

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • jens55undefined
                                    jens55 @nz_andy
                                    last edited by

                                    @nz_andy said in Industrial 3D printer designed & made in NZ:

                                    Thanks for the encouragement. At a guess it would be about 80K USD for one of these.

                                    Gasp .... but yeah, that is what I was afraid of.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • jens55undefined
                                      jens55
                                      last edited by

                                      Could you give a bit more details on the vacuum PEI print bed ?
                                      Are you just using vacuum to hold the PEI to the aluminum bed or have you figured out a way to have the vacuum assist in holding down the part somehow?
                                      Even if the vacuum is just holding down the PEI sheet it's a rather interesting concept since I have experienced curling of PEI when you get into more than about 90 to 100 degrees for the bed temperature. I would imagine this also helps tremendously in terms of pulling out the just finished print (with the PEI) to let it cool while using a new sheet of PEI for the next print.
                                      A very interesting concept !
                                      Titanium 3D printed printhead ..... oh man ..... I am lost for words !

                                      nz_andyundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • nz_andyundefined
                                        nz_andy @jens55
                                        last edited by

                                        @jens55 The vacuum bed works great. Have not had any issues even at 220deg C. There is literally tones of force holding it down.
                                        Yes works great for part removal. I normally don't even wait for it to cool down, just peel it off.
                                        The door is power actuated so we can automate later.

                                        https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                                        https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • nz_andyundefined
                                          nz_andy @jens55
                                          last edited by

                                          @jens55

                                          here is some 100% polycarbonate coming off a 145degC platform (125C chamber), dead flat , love the sound of this stuff.
                                          https://youtu.be/C7J8eOxjqNY
                                          We are using polycarbonate parts in-place of metal in suitable applications we build automated machines and this get used as a material of choice now.

                                          https://palmerdesign.co.nz/
                                          https://www.instagram.com/palmerdesign.co.nz/

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • 3DPMicroundefined
                                            3DPMicro @nz_andy
                                            last edited by

                                            @nz_andy 80k is reasonable and in the ball park with a Stratasys 400 or 3Dxtech Gearbox, actually about 20k less for yours. Agree that leadscrews/ballscrews are the way to go especially on larger volumes. Theres a pretty good sized Open Builds machine and a few others with lead or ball screws that produces really nice prints

                                            Duet controlled Jet Lathe, scratch built micro mill and 3d printer. 1992 Haas VF2 VMC retrofit

                                            nz_andyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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