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Elegoo Mars SLA-printer (resin printer)

The hacklab has a first-generation Elegoo Mars SLA resin printer. The printer is located inside a fume hood in the painting room.

Printer Specifications

Printing area: 120 x 68 x 155 mm
X/Y Resolution: 0.047 mm (2560 x 1440 pixels)
Layer height: Depends on resin; usually 0.05 mm

Preparing the Model

You can print any 3D model as long as it fits in the print area. The most common file format is STL. Models can be found online or created using CAD software, Blender, etc.

Models must be prepared using a slicing application before the printer can print them. The recommended application is ChiTuBox, which can be found on at least some of the computers at the lab. ChiTuBox can also add supports, make holes (for resin drainage) and hollow out the model (to conserve resin). Selecting the correct printer profile (Elegoo Mars) and the correct resin profile in ChiTuBox will give you workable default settings. If there is no profile for the resin you are using, consult the resin bottle.

After the model is sliced, put it on the USB stick found attached to the printer, then plug the USB stick into the USB extension cable next to the printer.

Working with the Printer

Resin Safety & Hygiene

ALWAYS WEAR SAFETY GOGGLES WHEN WORKING WITH RESIN. NO EXCUSES.

Resin is generally very toxic (as the red warning symbols on the bottle suggest). Wear safety glasses at all times when working around the printer, and do not touch the resin with bare skin and definitely do not ingest it. The resin causes chemical burns; it will not immediately burn skin, but it will immediately burn your eyes. If you get it on your skin, wipe it off with paper and then wash it off with running water immediately. If you get it in your eye, rinse the eye for 15 minutes and go to the hospital ASAP.

When working with resin, it is good to follow a clean hand & dirty hand hygiene practice. Wear a nitrile glove on one hand; this is the only hand that will ever touch resin, working ends of tools, the build plate of the printer, and anything else that comes in direct contact with resin. Your other hand is the clean hand; this is the only hand that will ever touch tool handles, the printer screen or anything else that should not come in direct contact with resin.

With appropriate precautions resin is easy to work with, so don't be too afraid of it.

Preparing the Printer

Turn the printer on using the power switch on the back side of the printer. Lift off the red plastic cover.

Make sure there is resin in the resin basin at the bottom. Odds are there already is resin in the basin; this is fine, as the resin will stay good for many days or weeks. However, it separates over time, so you will have to mix the resin in the basin before printing, as well as make sure there aren't any hard bits of resin floating around in it. The easiest way to do this is to wear a nitrile glove and mix the resin with your finger until it becomes uniform in colour (if it appears uniform already, mix it anyway; it could just be pretending).

If the resin in the basin has gone bad, you'll have to change it. TODO: how to change the resin

Make sure the build plate (the part at the top that dips in and out of the resin) is attached and tightened.

Set the red plastic cover back over the printer.

Printing

Select the file you want to print on the touchscreen. Verify that the preview and print time look about right and press start.

Observe the first couple of layers to make sure everything is going OK. The build plate should descend into the resin, reach the bottom, lift up a little, then descend again to touch the bottom. It will remain there for about 60 seconds (whatever you set the first layer exposure time at). Then it'll lift up a little, descend, and expose the second layer, which should take about 8 seconds. If things are still looking alright at this point and there are no weird crunching noises and resin isn't leaking out and the printer isn't on fire, it is safe to leave the printer unattended. You won't be able to actually see the print for a long time anyway as it will be upside down suspended in the resin.

Detaching the Print

Once the print is finished, the build plate will lift out of the resin to its maximum height and stay there.

At this point put a nitrile glove on your other hand as detailed in the resin hygiene section above. Loosen the big hand screw at the top of the printer using your clean hand, then detach the build plate by pulling it towards yourself – it will slide off horizontally. The build plate is covered in resin, so only touch it with your gloved dirty hand.

Using a scraper, carefully detach the part from the build plate. It is alright to scrape the build plate with a metal scraper, but do it gently at a low angle to not leave any deep marks and to avoid damaging your print. Remove any supports from the print and wipe off excess resin using a paper towel.

Cleaning the Print

Next to the printer is an Anycubic Wash and Cure machine, which is used for washing and curing prints. Remove the yellow plastic cover of the machine. Do not touch the cover or any part of the machine or the container with your gloved dirty hand. Take the lid off the large cleaning fluid (the fluid is isopropyl alcohol) container and place it in the Anycubic. There are little grooves to help you align it, but there is no mechanical connection; the mixer at the bottom is rotated using magnets.

Put your print in the metal washing rack, then lower the rack into the cleaning fluid container. The handle fits into slots near the top of the machine. Put the yellow plastic cover on the machine. Set the machine to Wash mode using the control panel, and adjust the time to your liking (2 or 4 minutes should be enough). Start the machine and wait for the cleaning program to run. The machine will beep once the program is finished.

After the program is finished, lift the rack up, remove your print, and then rattle the rack against the edges of the container to get most cleaning fluid and loose pieces of plastic off of it before hanging it back up on the tool rack you found it on. Close the container lid tightly.

Finish cleaning your print up by hand by wiping off any remaining loose material and drying it using paper towels. Insert the acrylic platter into the Anycubic. It will slot into the axle at the bottom of the machine. Place your print on the acrylic platter and close the machine lid. Set the machine to Cure mode, adjust the timer to 6 minutes and press start. Once the program is done, flip your print upside down to expose the bottom and run it through the cure program again.

Your print should now be done.

Cleaning Up

Clean every tool you used with isopropyl alcohol and paper towels. Clean both sides of the build plate and reattach it to the printer. Clean off any spills, bits of plastic etc. Put used paper towels and nitrile gloves in the trash. Replace all the paper towels covering the work surfaces after you're done. You should leave the printer nicer than you found it.

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