Universal 3D printing filament spool standard 2014
One spool to rule them all...
Coils and coils of lovely 3D printing filament, I'm usually surrounded by them, I struggle with them and often spend time and energy mounting, clamping, switching and feeding them into to various printers.
There has to be a better way. (lets please all find a better way)
Every single one is different, bare coils or reels, some are even different from the same manufacturer.
Just to point out here, this is only a tiny selection of 3D printing filament reels available, these are the ones I happen to still have around me. Even the long list on RepRap.org of filament suppliers is a fraction of what's actually available.
Loose coils of filament are both great (no wasted spool or extra cost to ship packaging) and also the work of the devil. You usually need to cut a random shorter length of coil off, just so you can use a section of material in a sensible way, or run the risk of getting into a tangled mess of coil and printer. You then risk not having enough material to finish the print, something that seems to happen more often than I would like.
Once when trying to use a 750gram loose coil of 1.75mm material (about 300+ meters) I had a tangle so bad the extruder pulled an entire shelf down onto a laptop below, smashing it, bending rods on the printer and also messing up a very nice print. I had mounted a home made spool holder to the shelf above the printer in an attempt to use loose coiled filament. My 20 euro coil of filament cost me over 400 in damages, I didn't do that ever again.
After a lot of messing about with making my own 3DPrinted spool holders, printing other peoples, making them by hand and using various mounting systems, I resorted to using a rack as shown above. It looks ugly, the filament gets dusty and problems like tangles still happen. But as I can't find a really good solution for various printers, this is the best I have.
The closest thing we have to a 'standard' reel is based around the use of 3mm plastic welding rod/coils for automotive repair industry, these very large coils have been used with 3D printing for many years. They have a lot of benefits, but also plenty of negative aspects. Mostly being heavy and big whilst also using more than 300g of ABS to make each one.
Recycle, Recycle-
One of the reasons I would like to see a spool standard is that I would also like to see less waste from 3D printing, and a way to recycle items like spools and packaging.
A few manufacturers like Josef Průša have already looked at cardboard, producing filament already on lightweight recyclable spools.
In this case the center mounting hole is rather large. The inner coil diameter is big enough not to cause the filament to be too tightly wound.
One of the very first filament orders I ever made came on cardboard spools, since then it's all been plastic of one form or another.
Lets take a look at some filament supplied on reels -
And lots of loose coils of filament too -
Ident | Make / manufacturer | Outer size diameter | Inner coil diameter | Mount hole diameter | Notes |
A | Makerbot 1.75mm (1Kg) | 202mm | 92mm | 51mm | Makerbot seem to have a new bigger spool? Can anyone confirm details. |
B | Colorfabb 1.75/3mm (750g) | 200mm | 105mm | 53mm | Now using a clear ABS reel (same dimensions) |
C | 297mm | 215mm | 52mm | ‘Industry Standard’ 2.2Kg (1) | |
D | 200mm | 103mm | 52mm | ABS for Up! printer | |
E | Prototype Cardboard | 215mm | 100mm | 53mm | (not in production) |
F | 160mm | 50mm | 31mm | Manufacturer unknown | |
G | Taulman3D Nylon | 127mm | 50mm | 19mm | Mini Spools |
H | Taulman3D Nylon | 195mm | 80mm | none | Old style packets |
I | 190mm | 103mm | 38mm | Various reel types used by eSunPLA | |
J | 160mm | 58mm | 31mm | mini reel | |
K | 202 | 78mm | 52mm | new reel? (conductive ABS) | |
L | Unknown from eBay | 200 | 79mm | 31mm | 2.5Kg spool |
M | 200 | 79mm | 31mm | 2Kg spool | |
N | 5Kg card spool | ||||
O | 220mm | 72mm | 32mm | 1Kg card Spool | |
P | 177mm | 75mm | 74mm | Metal/Card ~800g spool | |
Supplied | as Loose Coils | ||||
Q | 320mm | 230mm | N/A | Coil 3mm filament (100M / ~800g | |
R | 320mm | 270mm | N/A | Coil 1.75mm filament (100m / ~260g) | |
S | 420mm | 340mm | N/A | Coil 1.75mm filament (750g) | |
T | Hang on, that’s the same | image | as | H | Correct - It is… |
U | 185mm | 130mm | N/A | Polycarbonate / also using spools now. | |
V | Unknown from eBay? | Worst | filament | ever | Can’t remember |
W | 175mm | 140mm | N/A | Via 3Dfilaprint | |
X | 210mm | 150mm | N/A | Via Orbitech | |
Y | 190mm | 120mm | N/A | Via Orbitech | |
Z | 200mm | 140mm | N/A | Via Orbitech |
(1) - These large ‘Industry Standard’ 2.2Kg spools were first used in the plastic welding industry, it's the closest thing we have to a standard.
I looks like both 30mm and 50mm mounting holes appear in many different reels, that's something 'standard'
Can we make it Eco-friendly and recyclable?
Does anyone want it?
Making the 'perfect' spool has a number of challenges -
- The inner coil diameter needs to be appropriate for the type of material and size being wound.
- Spool mounting diameter - Some physical resistance is good for spool mounting. Quite often a printed spool holder is used to mount the reels of filament, many different sizes force users to produce smaller diameter mounting rods in an attempt to be able to mount different types, often resulting in noise and rocking around as the spools unwind. Currently one size does not fit all.
- Width of spool and overall outer dimension is also important, but more in deciding how much filament is required for each spool.
- Print material - to some degree defines the minimum internal coil size. 1.75mm material can be wound in a tighter coil and materials like Taulman Nylon or Recreus FilaFlex are both so flexible they can be wound very tightly with minimal impact on the ability to print with them.
- Nylon's, flexible and PET materials also have a tendency to try and unwind from their coils so a bigger inner coil diameter could also help them be less likely to loop and get tangled.
Another major factor will be cost of the spool and any packaging. reducing weight is good for shipping costs and making it from materials that can be easily recycled really needs to be a major goal.
Plastic spools used today cost under $1 and in reality customers are not likely to pay a great deal more for a standard spool? but how much and can a robust spool made from materials like strong cardboard be viable?
Ideas - spark more ideas -
We now have dimensional information above on some of the types of spools and coils available, and to get the ball rolling here are some simple ideas for filament spools I have been thinking about.
We can see that many reels already have a 50mm mounting hole diameter, so this looks like a reasonable starting point, Both the Ultimaker and Makerbot Replicator use a 50mm spool mount.
The inner inner diameter, bigger is better, but you need to allow enough room for filament without also having a very large outer diameter. A size of around 120mm for the internal seems to work well for most types of plastics and filled materials in both 3mm and 1.75mm sizes.
A diameter of 220mm for the outer will allow for a typical quantity of filament depending on the width of the spool, 75mm shown here.
Cardboard spool concept, 1Kg spool or 3 x 250g based on the same specification of mounting hole and overall size.
The plastic dust cover/case is an item I would also like to see available (or 3D printed) - make it easy to mount on / in a 3D printer and refill with the recyclable cardboard filament spools.
If you want to get involved (and please do), a discussion thread on the RepRap Forum is started here.
- Start discussions wherever you want, and spread the word, lets make something happen.
- Ask your filament supplier if they can support the standard, if they say no, ask them why and let people know the reasons.
- If you manufacture a 3D printer, what do you require from a filament spool?
- Sketch or design something, say what would work for you and your 3D printer, what's not working now and how you solve it (or not).
The 3D Printing Association is providing support for this project and also looking for feedback and ideas to help with this campaign, both from filament manufacturers and everyone in the community.
Individual manufacturers (both filament and 3D printer) can submit feedback and ideas directly and I hope more will also get involved and see if this can result in something good and useful for all.
Thanks for reading.
Rich.
Category: 3dprintingindustry, campaign, colorfabb, design, eSunPLA, faberdashery, filament, Laybrick, laywood, mendel-parts, Orbitech, pp3pd, protoparadigm, reprapper, reprapworld, size, spectrum, spool, Taulman
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