Archive for January, 2009

A test of casting parts from liquid plastic

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

As part of prototyping production methods for our mills we tried playing with castible molds and plastic to provide a solution for the rapid production of multiple copies of a part. The results were fairly promising and the company may offer cast kits at some point.

Smoothon.com offers multiple lines of castable plastic resins with lines of compatible mold materials, and release agents. Smoothon.com also supplies tutorials for all their products – but the casting process is fairly simple and we will show what we tried here.

Start by gluing an original part to be copied down to a water proof sheet of flat material, and build a mold box around the parts. When casting multiple parts add small pieces of material connecting the parts. This will leave a channel in the cast mold through which the liquid plastic can flow, allowing the entire mold to be poured from a small number of points. Next add one or more pieces of material that will stick up out of the mold to provide pour points. Also add other pieces of material should also stick up out of the mold to allow places for the air to escape. The air vents can be very small – tooth picks work well.

Pieces mounted in mold box

Pieces mounted in mold box

Once the parts have been glued into the mold box hot glue the mold box to the underlying water proof sheet. This prevents the liquid mold material from leaking out of the box. If using a wooden mold box it is also a good idea to hot glue the interior corners of the mold box to make it liquid tight and able to hold the molding material. Pictured above is a mold ready for casting, and the same mold once cast is pictured below. You can see small pieces of wood used as risers for air and pouring points. Once the mold has hardened, you break down the mold, remove the original pieces and pull out the risers that were added for pour points and air venting.

Mold box filled and drying

Mold box filled and drying

To cast parts you just re-assemble the mold treating the inside with a release agent. You want to glue the box down to the underlying sheet again, this time to prevent any liquid plastic from escaping. When casting large pieces you should also put something heavy on top of the mold to prevent the mold material from floating up when you pour in the liquid casting material. At this point you just mix and pour your liquid plastic and fill the mold.

Make sure to have some place to pour off any excess material in case you mix too much plastic. Be sure to carefully read the directions on how the material used should be mixed and handled to avoid air bubbles in the finished casting. Stirring either to vigorously or not enough can both cause defects to result in most cast materials.

Once the plastic hardens break down the mold box and remove the pieces. A sample mold with cast pieces is pictured below.

Pieces in mold

Pieces in mold

Then just peal the parts out of the mold and cut off the flashing.

Removing pieces from the mold to clean up the flashing

Removing pieces from the mold to clean up the flashing

Below are pictured some white sample cast parts next to their black ABS plastic pattern originals. The “wavy-ness” you see on the cast surfaces is because I used aluminum foil as a casting surface. They foil was not perfectly flat and this ended up being reflected in the cast surface.

Cast pieces next to the originals

Cast pieces next to the originals

So in summary casting parts turned out to be very easy and fast once you had an original. We anticipate that our customers who want a large number of a particular part will probably end up making molds or casting off parts made by one of our products.

Mmmmmm chocolate and prototyping – two great tastes…

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

For custom confection design one of the things our products will be able to make are custom molds. This is most likely how people would make custom shaped chocolate pieces – not carving them. However, we realized that cheap chocolate bars with a high wax content are available everywhere. So we looked into using cheap chocolate as a substitute for machinable wax. While expensive, since machinable wax is reusable and easy to get a hold of. We are even going to ship a small quantity of machinable wax with our mills. In a pinch though, from our initial testing it defiantly looks like chocolate will work as a substitute.

The picture shows the letters S&T stippled into the surface of the chocolate and a swirl pattern carved most of the way into the bar.  

It’s alive!

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

At 10:30pm on December 26th 2008, Konrad and Aaron brought the company’s “Bluebox” prototype online  successfully demonstrating 3-axis positioning. We were both fairly excited. Bluebox is the third generation of a design that we have been working on and tweaking for months. Testing showed mechanical things are finally starting to get dialed in, and everything was working better then we hoped. 

We forgot to take a picture with both of us in the frame. Hence the duplicate pictures. 

Who is Purple Crayon?

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

An old school garage style startup, Purple Crayon is a new company dedicated to developing and selling consumer personal fabrication technologies. At its core the idea of personal fabrication is to provide anyone the ability to “make stuff” regardless of skills or knowledge. The idea is similar to modern desktop printers, which make it possible for anyone to produce high quality printed material with absolutely no idea how the printer works. Personal fabrication technologies will have an impact on the same scale of the industrial revolution – enabling anyone with a vision to build it, or share with others to build or modify a version of their own.

 

The first step on the road to consumer personal fabrication devices is making 3D scanners, printers, and milling machines cheap, popular, and easy to use; so that’s what we’re going to do. Purple Crayon’s first products will be a combination computer controlled milling machines and scanner, designed for use in the home. Keep checking this web site for information on buying one of these units, which will go on sale in April or May of 2009 for under $1,000. We will be using this blog to track our progress and post links of interest on personal fabrication technology – so check back often.