![]() I don’t think the stuff is that bad, but it does make it awkward from a lab-safety/university protocols point of view. Click to find the best Results for anycubic photon mono x Models. The resin is easy to poor and use, but the bottle does come with a lot of warnings about it being hazardous, and the printer package comes with latex gloves and a mask. Every Day new 3D Models from all over the World. I started with the test object that comes on the USB stick, which is a cool lattice cube, with the words ANYCUBIC and PHOTON inside it: Printing Finished and raised out of the resin The finished object Printing the test object. what it’s hardening at each layer: Printing a complex object, this layer is just three small cylinders. While it’s printing, the LCD screen shows what the UV plate is doing, i.e. #Anycubic photon mono x download#Once you’ve got a file, USB it over to the printer (or download an app and do it wirelessly, but that’s a bit of a pain when my computer is next to the printer). A little bit clunky, but no worse than Cura, and definitely better than the Dremel software. #Anycubic photon mono x serial#Being a serial updater, the first thing I did was download the most up to date version from the Anycubic website, only to find files produced with that wouldn’t print, so I went back to the version that comes on the USB stick. The printer comes with a USB stick that has the Anycubic Photon Workshop on it. ![]() It’s pretty quick too – specs say 60mm per hour, but it depends what you’re printing and how dense it is. The resolution is a spectacular 0.01mm, and the prints I’ve done you can barely see the layers. That’s quite a good bit larger than my older Dremel 3D20 (which was 228 x 149 x 139). The big selling point, other than resolution, is the build volume – 192mm x 120 mm x 245 mm. ![]() The result of that process is that you don’t get the obvious trails of plastic on surfaces, and that you can achieve really fantastic resolutions. Shop for Anycubic Photon Mono X 3D Resin Printer, Large, High Speed Builds w/ App Control (1 Piece) at King Soopers. The Mono X is a resin-based 3D printer, which hardens resin using a UV plate, rather than the cheaper, more common printers that use a spool of plastic and lay it down. I got the Anycubic Mono X, and the Wash and Cure – these are amazon links, and at the moment the printer is on offer at sub £400, and the Wash and Cure is ~£200. Right: the Anycubic Mono X, and Left: the Wash and Cure. I’ve been super impressed with it, and images and write up follow. I actually got it at the start of semester, last September, but have been so busy with teaching I didn’t get chance to give it a run until recently (after our second semester ended). As part of a teaching push, I was able to secure a new 3D printer for the lab, to produce specimens for practical sessions (on our Zoology and Animal Behaviour programmes). ![]()
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