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178

Ok, now this one could be really useful. Especially for you lucky people that can switch filament on the fly while printing.

Archive: https://archive.today/V00U1

From the post:

>If one has a multi-material printer there are more options than simply printing in different colors of the same filament. [Thomas Sanladerer] explores combinations of different filaments in a fantastic article that covers not just which materials make good removable support interfaces, but also which ones stick to each other well enough together to make a multi-material print feasible. He tested an array of PLA, PETG, ASA, ABS, and Flex filaments with each in both top (printed object) and bottom (support) roles.

Ok, now this one could be really useful. Especially for you lucky people that can switch filament on the fly while printing. Archive: https://archive.today/V00U1 From the post: >>If one has a multi-material printer there are more options than simply printing in different colors of the same filament. [Thomas Sanladerer] explores combinations of different filaments in a fantastic article that covers not just which materials make good removable support interfaces, but also which ones stick to each other well enough together to make a multi-material print feasible. He tested an array of PLA, PETG, ASA, ABS, and Flex filaments with each in both top (printed object) and bottom (support) roles.
[–] 1 pt

I accidentally picked a couple different materials for a print yesterday and the machine put up a big fat warning on the screen about it ending up in disaster. Apparently they were not compatible, I gotta bookmark this post now!