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I've been looking into this material due to the really nice surface finish and clean look (actually purchased some already 😅)

However I recently came across a video by CNC kitchen where he raised some potential health concerns relating to the fibers specifically inside the filament. One of the commenters mentioned they couldn't wash the fibers off their skin, and another likened it to the "3d printing equivalent of asbestos"

I don't plan to print with it just yet due to needing a hardened nozzle, and spare extruder parts. However when I do, i'm feeling a little worried about how safe it is - mainly whether the final printed part is fine for occasional skin contact, or whether this material should ideally be left to just cosmetic parts.

P.S. image not mine, taken from here

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[-] FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 32 points 5 months ago

For the record, chopped strand fiber in a fdm printer doesn’t significantly increase strength- especially along layer lines.

It might increase tensile strength of the load is parallel to the layers, but that’s about it. In every other direction, the fiber doesn’t cross layers, and delaminating is the primary failure mode.

The strands would be more like glass fiber than asbestos- you wouldn’t want it in your lungs, but then it shouldn’t really be airborne.

A better option might be graphite filled, which will still get you that look, and help lighten the part without losing strength. Still would not want to sand it without ppe, though.

[-] grue@lemmy.world 9 points 5 months ago

If you want a high-strength part and you have carbon fiber and a 3D printer, what you want to do is 3D print a mold and then apply the carbon fiber and resin to it by hand (either laminated or "forged").

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[-] FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago

This is different from carbon fiber filament.

The filament is impregnated with short strands of carbon fiber (aka chopped strand,)

Basically, what you’re doing is using a 3d printed part as a core to shape the carbon fiber- which is a very useful trick- similar to shaping pink insulation foam and skinning that over. (Pink foam is fairly lightweight and very easy to shape- a resistive wire or wire heat gun cuts like butter. Especially useful if you take copper power wire and bend it to form.)

[-] BlueCollarRockstar@sh.itjust.works 4 points 5 months ago

I used it in a project 5 or 6 years ago, and my experience was basically this. It's strong in the direction of the layers but brittle between layers. Works great for some applications, but I'd definitely experiment with it before committing to use it on anything where the strength of the print matters because it's really only useful in two dimensions.

this post was submitted on 27 May 2024
122 points (96.9% liked)

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