This is a companion for the dimensional calibration tool by LuckyPants. It allows you to place up to 4 of those tools at a 45 degree angle in an oven (or other thermal test environment). I used to for testing how annealing my PLA based parts improves thermal resistance (i.e. can I put these parts in a hot car?). It allows you to use the weight of the part itself to exert a bending force on the middle of the part.
I printed mine in MakerGeeks PETG, but the next time I need to print it I'll probably print it in PLA and then anneal it at 80C for 40 minutes. The PETG did not hold up to temperatures as well as I had hoped.
In addition to this little jig. Here's my notes from my test:
Samples (each sample was 20% gyroid infill, 0.20 layer height):
Blue MakerGeeks PETG (this piece was not annealed)
Test environment:
A steam oven Sous Vide mode allowed very fine control of temperature and slow heating/cooling
The PLA/HTPLA and PETG test pieces were placed on the jig and heated in the oven at a series of temperatures. Each temperature was held for 30 minutes. The test temperatures: 50C, 60C, 70C, 75C, 80C, 90C
Findings:
The HTPLA shrunk 1.7% in X & Y and expanded 0.5% in Z during annealing
The HTPLA had no droop at any of the temperatures
Conclusions
PLA does almost as good as HTPLA if you don't mind the shrinkage
Annealed PLA has better temperature resistance than non annealed PETG
Possible further research:
Try higher temps - I stopped at 90C because that's what was easy to test in my oven (and I only needed my parts to survive in a super hot car - which the internet says is about 75C)
Printer Brand: Prusa
Printer: i3 MK3
Rafts: No
Infill: 20%
Filament: MakerGeeks PETG blue
Notes:
If you want this part to last, I'd recommend printing in PLA and annealing that PLA in an oven.
The author marked this model as their own original creation. Imported from Thingiverse.