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Old 11-03-2019, 10:20 PM
vortalexfan vortalexfan is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: Northern Indiana
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Electronic M View Post
+1

Most consumer 3D printers I've seen don't make especially smooth or detailed surfaces and the industrial ones that do are expensive...Also, there is the matter of creating and suitably refining a CAD model of the part.

Making a silicone mold is cheap, fast (ignoring mold and epoxy dry times, but you don't sit and watch it dry for a day like you might have to sit and tweak a cad model for hours) and accurate.

You can even make high-temperature silicone models that you can cast lead or pewter in...I've been considering doing that for a reproducing cracked pot metal parts for a Capehart turnover changer that I would like to eventually pair with my E.H Scott FM Philharmonic.
Look up the AFCA online and look up "switch replicas" on the forum there.

There are people out there that have 3D printed replicas of 110+ Year Old Power Switch Knobs for GE Pancake Fans from 1893-1908, and they turned out just fine, all they do is wet sand and buff out the rough edges and then polish with plastic polish like Novus on a Jewelers Rouge and they have a nicely reproduced plastic knob that looks just like the original.

http://afcaforum.com/view_topic.php?...e+switch+knobs

See link above for what I mean, they completely reproduced an entire ceramic bodied switch from a 100+ year old GE Fan using 3D Printer Technology and the switches look just like the originals, and the 3D Printer they used was NOT an industrial grade one.
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