Author Topic: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...  (Read 2559 times)

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Offline legacyTopic starter

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Recently I have been playing with 3d printers, developing kits and hacks, among which the replacement of the standard hot-plate with a custom one, and I got a lot of questions, thus I really wonder why people insist they want a 3d printer hot plate made with the same technology of Electronics PCB Circuit Board, rather than a plate made of aluminium?

an aluminum plate costs just 4 euro and it's for better at conducting heat than PCB, it's more mechanical resistant, and doesn't need to be painted.

copper is better at conducting heat than aluminum, but PCB plates only come with a thin copper plate, say a quart of the thickness is made of copper, the rest is resin and glass powder, that is rather heating insulation

there is up to 100 C degree on the hot plate, it needs to be of the same kind possible in every point of the plate,  thermal gradiends are not good when you print, and there are 3d printers that need a special mechanism to balance out the plate, this mechanism consists of five conductive areas on the plate, and the extruder head moves on the plate looking for these points to balance the plate by software, or by hardware if behind the plate there are 3 motors used to correct the roll on the X and Y axes.


so, why they insist on PCB-hot-plates :-//  ?


 

Online mikerj

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #1 on: June 19, 2018, 10:06:09 am »
How do you heat the aluminium plate without significant thermal gradients?
 

Offline legacyTopic starter

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #2 on: June 19, 2018, 10:08:12 am »
How do you heat the aluminum plate without significant thermal gradients?

the aluminum plate is 100% made of aluminum.
the PCB plate is made of copper for 1/4 and 3/4 of it are made of a thermal insulation material.

also, the copper does oxidate: how to solve it? with a protective spray?  :-//
 

Offline legacyTopic starter

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #3 on: June 19, 2018, 10:14:09 am »
anyway, when I was talking about thermal gradients, I was referring on the printing surface: ideally, you want the same temperature at every point on the printing surface. If the copper does oxidate, it's even more far from the ideality.

which treatment can you use to avoid that? to print, you need a spray to anchor the object you are printing,  when you remove the printed object, you might remove the treatment for the copper.

that is bad.
 

Offline sleemanj

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #4 on: June 19, 2018, 10:16:39 am »
Because a PCB based heated bed is cheap and easy to construct, very easy, you can make one yourself if you wanted, just like etching any other PCB, just a fairly large one.

If you make a heated aluminium bed, you have to heat the aluminium some how, how do you propose to do that, to construct a heating element which is appropriately bonded to the plate, this is not a trivial manufacturing task.
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Offline legacyTopic starter

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #5 on: June 19, 2018, 11:00:25 am »
Because a PCB based heated bed is cheap

Aluminum heated bed costs 4-5 Euro, already cut and you only need to drill 8 holes for the support.
The surface is electrically conductive, that makes it perfect for the auto-balancing mechanism (if the 3d printer supports it).

NOTE:
you have only to choose "untreated" aluminum plates, there are some with a protective film on the top, and this protective film is not electrically conductive.

and easy to construct

as easy as aluminum, but, to do a proper job, cutting PCB requires special tools, you can cut it with a common cutter, but after a while, it destroys the blame since the PCBs are made of glass powder and it's abrasive.

just like etching any other PCB, just a fairly large one

but the copper does oxidate, and you need to protect it. How to do so?

If you make a heated aluminum bed, you have to heat the aluminum somehow

the heater is a component, it stays below the aluminum plate, these parts are in contact, and the heater transmits the heat to the aluminum plate that diffuses it on the printing surface.

Thus you mechanically have a heater plate, and you have the aluminum plate on the top.

They are blocked with screws, and it's very easy to be assembled.
 

Offline mac.6

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #6 on: June 19, 2018, 12:08:26 pm »
my printer (ender 3) has an aluminum heated bed, with printed heat track on the back.
The issue is that it's warped, 0.15mm bend in the middle. With much seating, some precision rods and a granit surface plate I have been able to reduce it to <0.1mm, but glass is generaly <0.05mm out of the box.
 

Offline bob225

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #7 on: June 19, 2018, 12:15:40 pm »
why Pcb/wire elements ? cheap and easy to mass manufacture, proven to work, cheap heatpads are cheap for a reason, they are not made to last

eg. https://reprap.org/wiki/PCB_Heatbed#MK2_A4

Even high end machines use a pcb or wire element with a aluminium sheet on top to dissipate the heat, even the Ultimaker use it

building a heating element on a aluminium sheet is a no go as the aluminium will expand and contract at different rate to the copper or carbon


I started out with a ooznest prusa I3 with a Pcb MK2 heatbed what was a major learning curve, I now have a Ultimaker 2+ thats been flawless

if you want to really learn have a look around the openbuilds forum



« Last Edit: June 19, 2018, 12:25:19 pm by bob225 »
 

Offline legacyTopic starter

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #8 on: June 19, 2018, 01:02:56 pm »
with an aluminum sheet on top to dissipate the heat

that is close to my idea.

anyway, copper oxidizes, and you need a copper plate to auto-balance the plate, to correct the bend on the X and Y axes: how do you solve this problem with a copper plate?

here I need 5 electrically conductive points on the surface, moving the extruder on the Z axis, these points are checked before printing.
 

Offline bob225

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #9 on: June 19, 2018, 05:20:54 pm »
The pcbs are insulated you just need to wire it up

http://ooznest.co.uk/Aluminium-PCB-Heated-Bed-MK2B

 

Online mikerj

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #10 on: June 19, 2018, 10:15:36 pm »
How do you heat the aluminum plate without significant thermal gradients?

the aluminum plate is 100% made of aluminum.
the PCB plate is made of copper for 1/4 and 3/4 of it are made of a thermal insulation material.

You haven't answered the question, how are you planning to heat the aluminium plate evenly to avoid thermal gradients (since this seems to be one of your concerns)?

If you stick some power resistors to the back, you will get hot spots = thermal gradients.  A PCB can have an etched heating element distributed over the entire surface to get very even heating.
 

Offline sleemanj

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #11 on: June 19, 2018, 10:47:44 pm »

Aluminum heated bed costs 4-5 Euro, already cut and you only need to drill 8 holes for the support.


And you also need a heating element of some description.

and easy to construct

as easy as aluminum, but, to do a proper job, cutting PCB requires special tools, you can cut it with a common cutter, but after a while, it destroys the blame since the PCBs are made of glass powder and it's abrasive.

Good grief if you are doing that many you send it to the PCB factory.  And as above, if you are making from Aluminium you need an element too, which is not so easy to make.

just like etching any other PCB, just a fairly large one

but the copper does oxidate, and you need to protect it. How to do so?

With soldermask, legacy, use soldermask.

If you make a heated aluminum bed, you have to heat the aluminum somehow

the heater is a component, it stays below the aluminum plate, these parts are in contact, and the heater transmits the heat to the aluminum plate that diffuses it on the printing surface.

Thus you mechanically have a heater plate, and you have the aluminum plate on the top.

They are blocked with screws, and it's very easy to be assembled.

I think here we see the problem, you don't seem to understand that a PCB heated bed IS the element, there is no element underneath it, that is all there is.

So with an aluminium bed you need the aluminium slab AND a way of heating it up.  With the PCB heated bed, you need the PCB heated bed, the end.

This is a PCB heated bed, it is A PCB with a long windy copper trace eteched on the underside, and a copper plane on the top side, usually you put a glass plate, or some other printing surface (including an aluminium plate if you want) on top of this..

https://reprap.org/mediawiki/images/c/c4/PCB_HEATBED.jpg

again, this is a PCB, that's what it is, if you want to get rid of this then you need to replace it with something else to work as a flat, light weight, somewhat uniform heating element.  Can you do so cheaper and easier?




« Last Edit: June 19, 2018, 11:00:37 pm by sleemanj »
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Offline Gibson486

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #12 on: June 20, 2018, 01:19:16 pm »
How do you heat the aluminium plate without significant thermal gradients?

yeah...if you can do that, you can make a lot of money...
 

Offline thm_w

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #13 on: June 20, 2018, 08:09:43 pm »
yeah...if you can do that, you can make a lot of money...

My cheap $200 3D printer came with an aluminum heated bed that is even enough. I assume its the usual PCB on Al process, so you have a long length of copper track on the bottom, very thin pcb, then the aluminum.

If you want to purchase one alone its about $30 (so more expensive than PCB).
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Funssor-Delta-Rostock-Kossel-3D-printer-240-x-270-PCB-hot-bed-12V/32815266304.html

The one advantage I do see for PCB heater is the thermal insulation the PCB provides (helps the bed heat up faster). You can see in the above link, it can be achieved on a Al bed as well, with white thermal sheet.
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Offline Sal Ammoniac

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #14 on: June 20, 2018, 09:05:01 pm »
Another options is an IMS (Insulated Metal Substrate) PCB. Many PCB fab houses, including PCB Pool, offer this as an option.

https://uk.beta-layout.com/pcb/pcb-types/info_pcbpool_alupanel.html
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Online Mechatrommer

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #15 on: June 21, 2018, 12:48:01 pm »
Abs wont stick to aluminium even when heated iirc. And possibility of scratching the bed with nozzle when used naked making using sacrificial blue or kapton tape is a good idea and hence conductive contact for bed levelling is not. Anyway my cheapo printer is aluminium plate on top and pcb heater trace below (and blue or kapton changable tape on top top) so this is a 'i don't get this' thread. And i dont see how trying to embed heating element into aluminium plate can end up in 4 euro tooling and labor of commercial product cost except for charity work...ymmv.
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Offline Gibson486

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Re: for the daily WTF, I wonder why the 3d printer hot plate ...
« Reply #16 on: June 21, 2018, 01:12:38 pm »
yeah...if you can do that, you can make a lot of money...

My cheap $200 3D printer came with an aluminum heated bed that is even enough. I assume its the usual PCB on Al process, so you have a long length of copper track on the bottom, very thin pcb, then the aluminum.

If you want to purchase one alone its about $30 (so more expensive than PCB).
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Funssor-Delta-Rostock-Kossel-3D-printer-240-x-270-PCB-hot-bed-12V/32815266304.html

The one advantage I do see for PCB heater is the thermal insulation the PCB provides (helps the bed heat up faster). You can see in the above link, it can be achieved on a Al bed as well, with white thermal sheet.

Understood, but other applications would beg to differ. There are some applications where the gradient cannot be more than .01 degree C in an 32 in^2 area while still maintaining a +/-.01 degree C set point with something sitting on it . That being said...I do not think 3d printers need that, but I never made a 3d printer before.
 
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