PhotoCentric3D UV LCD Flexible
Flexible Resin for LCD 3D Printer
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Product information & technical details
- Manufacturers: PhotoCentric3D
- Shore Hardness : D85
- Product types: Resin
- Light source: LCD
- Filament colour: Black
Description
Soft, flexible parts can be made with this flexible resin. The 3D printed objects can be stretched without tearing or breaking. This makes this resin ideal for flexible applications. Thin or hollow structures can be bent or compressed and easily return to their original shape.
Only compatible with UV LCD printers like D7, Anycubic Photon, Kudo Bean and many others.
Follow the instructions in the user manual of your UV-LCD printer. The curing times can be found on the PhotoCentric3D UV support page. The resin should be protected from direct sunlight. Full post cure should be at least 1 hour in UV light.
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Customer Reviews
1 English review written for PhotoCentric3D UV LCD Flexible
5 customer reviews in all languages
5 stars | | 2 | (20%) |
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4 stars | | 0 | (0%) |
3 stars | | 1 | (10%) |
2 stars | | 1 | (10%) |
1 Stars | | 6 | (60%) |
10 reviews
1 customer review in English
5 customer reviews in all languages
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Awful
Rated with 1 out of 5 stars.
I thought this could help replace several different small casting molds I've been using, to try and speed up production times for certain products.
However, this is absolutely useless stuff. I've ended up wasting half the bottle testing about 30 different prints, varying exposure times, lift speeds, base layers, base exposure, curing times, curing methods, curing temps etc. I'm printing on an Elegoo Mars in preparation testing for production on a Saturn in 2 weeks, so I used the suggested Anycubic Photon settings as a benchmark (nearly identical printers) and that failed. I ended up ruining FEP sheets due to this not wanting to stick the build plate in most configurations.
I slowly worked my way up to some settings that wouldn't fail mid print. I finally got myself some working examples from various exposure settings. I tested multiple cure methods, starting with their recommended times and temps and going from there.
After getting several working examples, it appears that the technical data for this resin just isn't correct in the slightest. This is definitely not 85A equivalent. It feels closer to 95A, but with absolutely useless strength. It's nowhere near as flexible as it advertised, and the strength is laughable. A baby could tear this stuff. I did elongation tests after a maximum 3 day settle and my best result managed 3%. Equivalent casted parts held in excess of 15kg and elongation of 50-60%; this resin couldn't take my smallest weight. Results were basically identical regardless of the cures/exposures used.
For £55/kg, I expect a hell of a lot better.
I asked for help to see if there was any tips Photocentric could provide, but unfortunately as they had no technical data for my printer their recommendation was just to give me what was already in the TDS. Understandable, but still disappointing.
I think Photocentric should mimic what other suppliers are doing and have the option to purchase printed samples. At least in that scenario, I can test a product beforehand, or if issues arise I am able to see if it's the product's fault or my own. However in this instance I feel it is a problem with the product - I've since seen reviews of this resin on other sites, and the conclusion seems to be that it's just rubbish.
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