Friday, April 18, 2025
Hackaday "Jolly Wrencher" 1.5mm x 1.5mm
So the "Maus" RepRapMicron mechanism still works, and the electrochemically etched nichrome tip that I bent stood up to it all. That's a relief. I could deposit at much finer resolution in resin as I can get down to 15-20μm per pixel with that rather than the rather ragged 30μm pixels that the mechanical process of chipping away Sharpie marker creates. Not so visible for debugging but.
Still, this PNG to GCODE converter works well enough. Might be a convenient way of testing the conductive/semiconductive resins for arrays of LEDs or sensors etc. when I finally get hold of some.
Here's the Maus in the process of doing the print. I'm using the mechanism described here and Arduino/GRBL electronics.
Hello World
Just testing out the png_to_gcode generator I've put up on github at https://github.com/VikOlliver/RepRapMicron/tree/main/png_to_gcode and thought you might get a kick out of the "Hello World" I did with it to get my eye back in after a long absence. The points are on a 30μm grid, and Hello World takes 43 pixels, so that's [does maths] 1290μm - about 1.3mm in smug units, 5 one hundredths of an inch in Bronze Age units.
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"Hello World" about 1.3mm wide |
I did bend the etched tip and will have to make a new one, so I don't feel so bad about using the bent one to chisel away a layer of Sharpie marker in these tests. It actually worked well despite the kink, and I'm experimenting with it some more. Stopping the probe tip 10μm above the surface and lowering slowly the rest of the way definitely improves output quality.
Thursday, April 17, 2025
I'm Baaaack!
Alright. Relatives visited and recovered, art commission finished ("Kaleidoscope" opens 24th April at Aratoi gallery in Masterton), and other than blowing up the 100W laser cutter life has returned to 'normal'.
Art project required some nifty small UV LEDs, which I have subverted a few of for the μRepRap to see if they will set resin. Just haven't got round to trying it.
I've also created some code to turn a PNG bitmap into GCODE point plotting, which currently doesn't have the dip pen stuff in it but I'll put that in under testing. Monochrome only at this point, though there's no theoretical reason why we can't use multiple resin types.
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Let The Conductive Chaos Continue
Some "Are you OK?" messages in my inbox. So yes, I am, for given values of OK. I have a commission to fulfil, which got reduced in time by 70% so am in flat panic mode doing little else.
On the μRepRap front, I've been totally unable to secure conductive resin. This means most other people won't either, so a DIY approach may be necessary. I'm looking at two approaches:
1. Source some PEDOT from Asia and mix my own using standard UV resin. In theory I can make something that will work. However, the stuff is expensive, and other reagents are needed which may be illegal in some jurisdictions, so convenient synthesis may have to be developed too.
2. Good ol' graphite. Unfortunately the graphite dust available at hardware stores is somewhat chunky on the scale that μRepRap works on. It may be possible to put it in an ultrasonic cleaner and break it down to smaller particles.
Sadly, no time to play. If anyone else wants to have a go, please do.
Monday, March 03, 2025
Life throws a curve ball
You may have noticed a lack of updates. This is because I had to enter a long shooting competition some distance from the lab. I have returned to find my father unwell, and have to fly off again in a few days. This is not conducive to getting work done, and why I would appreciate others joining in with the project.
The conductive resin suppliers contacted so far either fail to understand how the printer works and say their inks are unsuitable for 3D printers, or simply fail to respond. If anybody can get some, please let me know. Otherwise I'll be forced to do what I did for RepRap and invent the printing material myself.
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
eSun Triangle Print Success!
I re-ran the print of the triangles, this time with a base size of 300μm and eSun Standard Resin. The resin reservoir was a little further away, so this one took about an hour to print. One layer. Well, it's a prototype and I'm not pushing for speed. I've boosted the contrast and overlaid a 50μm grid on it:
Damn my lenses are filthy. Here's what PrusaSlicer thinks it is printing:
The probe, by my CNC console's measurement, needs to be positioned correctly within about 5μm. Getting that better calibrated will result in thinner lines - the 30μm lines (I've made 10μm dot grids before) were just how it turned out rather than a specific aim. But this does show that across 0.6mm the probe height above the stage remains reasonably consistent so that's more data on the stage's parallel flexure design. Also, as the probe was dipped tens of times, the seeking seems to be reasonably consistent.
The microscope image was taken after blasting the thing with UV for 5 minutes. I've given it another 5 before putting it in the sample box.
A few dev notes to self: The "dipify" code is returning to the start of the current line rather than the last plotted point, which needs fixing. I could probably plot a lot more points with one dip, which will speed things up. Might be able to magnify it using a laser to project an image using the "water drop laser microscope" trick, but don't want to submerge one yet.
The idea is to make something that can be folded up into a pyramid. I won't do that with this one, it's a bit of a historical sample that I want to keep and show off!
I have added the PrusaSlicer config and the latest "dipify" python code to the github repo.
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
The Mysterious Case Of The Thinning Resin
Looking carefully at the results of the previous print test, I noted a weird thing: A double line drawn in the resin was solid, while single lines tended to bead up. The beading of the resin like this was observed in the very first resin-dragging probe tests here. I wondered if there might be a line width at which the process of curing the no-name resin causes it to contract. A simple experiment was conducted to see if some new resin did the same thing.
Using a new bottle of eSun Standard Resin, I placed a droplet of resin using a wiped, blunt probe onto a microscope slide. It spread out to 6mm diameter. Then, using a 0.5mm hypodermic I drew out a few trails of resin, and checked with a microscope that very fine trails had been drawn out. I cured the resin, and looked again.
There appears to be a point, somewhere below 10μm, where the resin will pull itself into beads as it cures. However, the eSun stuff seems to be a bit more stable than my earlier no-name batch, so I'll have to re-run the test with the triangles.
Here's a not-very-good screenshot at maximum magnification of my camera setup. I copied a 20μm square from a calibration slide shot through the same lens. You can only just see a fine trail (it's a lot clearer with the naked eye) to the right of the calibration square, which is about as fine as I can go before things blob up.
I really need to find a way to dye the resin to make photography easier. I have tried fluorescein but that does not seem to be resin-soluble. I have no idea what the height is, as I have no way to measure it. This may also be important. Dunno.
So, some fiddling to go, but 10μm features would appear to be possible with the new eSun resin. Stay tuned, folks.
Monday, February 17, 2025
First resin print from object file
Cut to the chase. The base of the centre triangle is 200μm (0.2mm) across. Imaged on a 10% tilt to make the clear resin visible.
Here is the actual test object. Original is as an SVG with 2mm thick lines on a scale of 1mm to 1 micron:
Note that the images are taken after the resin is cured. I wanted to cure them before I moved anything, so no micrograph of them pre-cure. Here's a screenshot from the USB cameras as I was running the right-hand triangles:
I do not have a particularly fantastic view! You can see how the probe is dipped in a relatively thin area of the resin reservoir, and how the folded edge of the reservoir's contact foil retains the resin.
Anyway, the right-hand one was done at a height which I could definitely see resin deposited through the USB microscope. Both resin prints granulated significantly on curing. The left-hand one was done more carefully, lowering the probe by 3μm until some perceivable change happened on the slide. The probe was dipped in resin after every 15 droplets were deposited. Droplets are 18μm apart on the right, 15μm apart on the left.
Viewed with an eyeball, the central triangle on the left is a discrete object with a hollow centre. Something useful may be happening if two lines are deposited close together. For further investigation.
The height of the cured droplets is not readily discernible at 100x magnification with a bench microscope. Better lighting and slider holders are going to be needed to get decent images.
Wow. So much learned with this session.