Monday, May 11, 2026

3D Printer - Expanding thinking about Student Projects

 

3D Printing Lore #7 - Don't Underestimate the Technology Involved in 3D Printing

Since last year we've made a series of posts about talking or discussion points for 3D Printing, under the heading #3DPrinting Lore - talking points for educators or in some cases challenges based around the work that we are doing here on this site and out our school.

In the previous series of posts about this topic - all of which are posted on this blog, which you can click on the links below here to access:

#1 You don't need more than a single printer to print in the school environment.   As explained in this post in December of last year we are intending to print the entire volume of our school projects and class projects off one single machine this year and will be notifying when not possible.  As we speak, in May, we have managed to achieve this so far.

#2 You don't need to print all of your 3D Printing Projects.   We've been increasing using the AR/VR Function of the Tinkercad App to project images in a variety of sizes and locations.

#3 Consider using glow-in-the-dark and other speciality filament which typically are an eye catching alternative which can be printed just like regular PLA.

#4 Juniors can print, design and create just as effectively as our senior students - a post from January 2025 highlighting some of our amazing junior school student designs.

#5 Teachers can be aware but don't need to be an expert.   We detail about how resourcing is available to help teachers tip their toes including tutorials and information.

#6 Don't Underestimate the Students - another year another classroom of students and another range of brilliant designs coming from the cohort one group of students who have only to this point being using Tinkercad to design for a few months.

The prints that are shown in this post represent a series of print completed on a single print run.   Over the many years that we have been impressed with how the technology has improved in both the reliability and quality (details of the printing).

In this example the five pieces of work printed were completed in a single print run.   There was absolutely minimal print rafting - the prints varied in size however the larger ones measured 180mm long.  

The printer ran non-stop for fourteen and a half hours - and used 730g of filament (as the PLA is typically purchased in 1kg lots).   This was approximately $22.00 worth of filament. 

This is something that we would have shied away from in the past - the printers are producing much more quality work (and for example our Bambu H2D is working at twice the speed of previous prints).

The project is of course part of the amazing work from our very own Mr Bloor and his DPE technology group.   You can see the project details here by clicking on this link.

No comments:

Post a Comment