3DPrinting
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Great info, that!
We always keep the dryer at 45C (not sure why, we just do...) I just looked it up and it looks like 65C for 8 hours is a minimum for TPU. So unless my colleague left the spool of TPU in it over the weekend - which I doubt - it would not have been enough. Unless he took the spool right out of the vacuum-sealed bag with the silicagel packet in it. I don't know. I'll ask him.
I am rapidly discovering. That spools do not seem to arrive dry.
Also, desiccant will not dry a spool. It keeps the air dry and will prevent a dry spool becoming wet. With ASA, I am learning you always need to dehydrate before first use. But am hoping using desiccant and vacuum bags will limit the time needed when reusing an open spool.
They will limit, but not by as much as you’d want. Plastic bags still allow moisture to pass through even when they’re airtight. I live in a swamp, so drying is a necessity before every print.
Yeah UK ain't a swamp. But 50 to 60% rh is common.
So I'm thinking I may have to think that way.
Yeah. Those bags hardly do anything when the spool sits for months on a shelf.
Yeah thanks for the bad news.
I am using these https://www.printables.com/model/50375-desiccant-silica-hygrometer-spool-container-modula
So should be able to tell. Treating the cheap, crappy meters as binary. IE, if RH% above minimum readable the bag has failed.
Just to add what others have said, the temp you dry at is as important if not more important than time and different for each type of plastic. If you don’t have it hot enough (typically near the glass transition temperature of the plastic) then the moisture is not able to escape the plastic.
Cool project as well, I have wanted to do the same!