• Scam Alert. Members are reminded to NOT send money to buy anything. Don't buy things remote and have it shipped - go get it yourself, pay in person, and take your equipment with you. Scammers have burned people on this forum. Urgency, secrecy, excuses, selling for friend, newish members, FUD, are RED FLAGS. A video conference call is not adequate assurance. Face to face interactions are required. Please report suspicions to the forum admins. Stay Safe - anyone can get scammed.

Filament Strength?

Janger

(John)
Vendor
Premium Member
Anyone printing carbon fiber? Is it actually stronger? Lots of prices and types on Amazon... which?

I've printed a bunch of speed handles for the vise. 3/4" hex handle. They work great for positioning the jaw but will break if you try to tighten up much. I reprinted them with 5 perimeters and 55% infill. They are stronger now but you can still break them. I used PETG and then tried ABS. They don't seem much different in strength. Any ideas? is carbon fiber stronger in practice?

60421298334__F9D1F57E-B6EE-4DFA-AECD-7BE5FE28D224.JPG


60445957424__42C8FC69-D339-49D7-82D8-2953551BF8BD.JPG
 
Still don’t have a working printer or I would try some. Will be following if an answer ever happens along though
 
I'm the last guy to ask about anything 3DP but from what I gathered from RC guys making components, this seems to sum it up (higher modulus but not necessarily much higher tensile/flexure strength). But products are changing all the time so this could be old news. Some guys complained that the CF fill required diddling the printer settings because of the (inert & non-melting) carbon fill. I also read about some new CF print products coming out that looked better but I think those were the resin system.
https://www.proto-pasta.com/pages/carbon-fiber-pla
The short answer is that this filament isn't "stronger," rather, it is more rigid. Increased rigidity from the carbon fiber means increased structural support but decreased flexibility, making our Carbon Fiber PLA an ideal material for frames, supports, shells, propellers, tools... really anything not expected (or desired) to bend.
 
I didn't notice improved strength in the petg I had. I did notice alot of stringing which I've never been able to get rid of. My filament of choice right now is PC+ from iprint3d (temp closed according to website). I've got CF PLA, but I've never printed it. It looks cool though especially in the t-rex skull I seen printed with it. If you are looking for a filament which is strong, prints well, doesn't string try PC+ (polycarbonate). I like it better than ABS since it doesn't pull off bed, better than PLA for rigidity, nylon forget about (sucks moisture from air instantly, high heat for bed and nozzle), and I hate petg (never had ANY luck with it, and yet a friend has great success).

PC+ prints at 265/85
 
just looked at what your printing. I think you need to beef up the handle with some steel. it won't matter what you print that in, the handle will break off in every case. Sticking through the base into the handle would cure the issue.
 
I have one printer, PETG strings like a bugger, printer right next to it, flawless. Heat, retraction, speed. One or a combo of those affecting it.
 
just looked at what your printing. I think you need to beef up the handle with some steel. it won't matter what you print that in, the handle will break off in every case. Sticking through the base into the handle would cure the issue.

Good idea Colten. Thanks for the suggestion.
 
One of these days I’ll have to try some of these new fangled filament. My printer is a Older Makerbot 2x Back then they just recommended the 3 types of filament it does make you wonder though.
 
The strength tests that CNC Kitchen did seem to indicate that PLA is stronger than any of them. Glass infill fiber is supposed to be stronger, but I haven't seen any tests yet...
 
Back
Top