- cross-posted to:
- 3dprinting@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- 3dprinting@lemmy.ml
Okay, this is an update of my first method using regular paper to splice filaments that I posted last week. It was okay, but it did require cleaning the splice because some paper stuck to it.
Somewhiteguy suggested in this comment that baking paper might yield better results. And boy! does it ever!
I’ve been thinking about trying this the entire week. Finally I got me a roll of the cheapest baking paper I could find at the supermarket while doing the groceries for the weekend and gave it a shot.
It is SO MUCH BETTER!
And here, just to prove it, I filmed myself doing a splice in real-time (sorry for the harsh light and the flickering, I filmed this under neon light in the lab).
Less than 3 minutes from start to finish if you ignore me fumbling with my cellphone to film this. No cleanup, perfect splice, and the roll of baking paper cost me a dollar and will last me a lifetime!
I genuinely thing this is the cleanest, cheapest, easiest splicing method that doesn’t wastes bits of PTFE tubing at each splice.
And most importantly, your paper probably requires significantly less nasty chemicals used and disposed of in its production than PTFE.
PFTE, a.k.a. Teflon, is a forever pollutant in and of itself (despite the finished product being mostly inert), but the ingredients used in its production are seriously nasty stuff. Just using little chunks of it and throwing them away to merely stick bits of filament together is a monumentally stupid idea, and Sunlu ought to be ashamed of themselves for even proposing it. I’d rather freehand splices together with a lighter than do that.
Even better: you can reuse the baking paper if you don’t overheat it 🙂