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What's the thickest/deepest item you printed directly on to with a UV Flatbed? Something more than golf balls

dreko

New Member
Most of the direct to substrate/item UV flatbed printers can accomodate thick items (like 5 - 8" high objects) but what is the deepest print you've made on a object?

Did you print on a item that tapered or curved up and down, a distance of like 2 - 4 inches? Or are all the UV flatbeds, only printing about 10mm of distance (like the top curve of a golf ball or curve of mug)

I'm trying to see what printer/machine, was able to jet the ink further and greater distances... than just a shallow depth
 

Christian @ 2CT Media

Active Member
Most of the direct to substrate/item UV flatbed printers can accomodate thick items (like 5 - 8" high objects) but what is the deepest print you've made on a object?

Did you print on a item that tapered or curved up and down, a distance of like 2 - 4 inches? Or are all the UV flatbeds, only printing about 10mm of distance (like the top curve of a golf ball or curve of mug)

I'm trying to see what printer/machine, was able to jet the ink further and greater distances... than just a shallow depth
None of them will jet to a depth greater than a few millimeters without losing image quality or fidelity its just the crux of inkjet. So you would have to align your print heads to the depth you want to print, but then you lose the fidelity on your flat surface prints.

What are you trying to accomplish?
 

dreko

New Member
So far 20mm is the largest depth from the manufacturer. Jetting distance.
Wanting to print directly onto topographical surfaces, that are not flat planes... and have varying z axis heights
 

Smoke_Jaguar

Man who touches printers inappropriately.
Did some Playstation 5's, those were a lot of drop. Stuff gets pretty dusty. Using LD2 mode on a UJF-6042MKII helped a bit, but it did come out well enough for the customer to like it. If using a bidirectional printer, set print to unidirectional for better results.
 

MarkSnelling

Mark Snelling - Hasco Graphics
We sell the Roland "object printers" which are very deep and can also add the ability to print on bottles. I've got customers who print on mini basketballs and Christmas ornaments with these units. Looks great. www.RolandDGA.com
 

Christian @ 2CT Media

Active Member
So again, no printers have active z-height control nor the physical ability to even move with out crashing into the surface... you will have to be satisfied with lower fidelity the further from the printhead the surface is.

Or you could look at other processes like printed thermoforming or texture printing and building the depth with Ink.
So far 20mm is the largest depth from the manufacturer. Jetting distance.
Wanting to print directly onto topographical surfaces, that are not flat planes... and have varying z axis heights
 

Smoke_Jaguar

Man who touches printers inappropriately.
I mean, you can print cylinders and spheres, just use unidirectional and keep it on the shallower part of the curves.
 

dreko

New Member
I need to win the lottery, so I can buy a large scale cobot, hire a mechanical engineer, and attach a industrial inkjet system to the cobot.
Then one could program a toolpath that follows the topographical contours instead of the usual XY rail/head travel...

I guess computational thermoforming is my best hope at the moment :(
 

Smoke_Jaguar

Man who touches printers inappropriately.
Looked into this, the trick is getting a printhead that is big enough to print a decent area, while having a small enough nozzle plate footprint to support quick, precise motions. Computational power is definitely there, as well as the kinematics and topology detection.
 

dreko

New Member
Looked into this, the trick is getting a printhead that is big enough to print a decent area, while having a small enough nozzle plate footprint to support quick, precise motions. Computational power is definitely there, as well as the kinematics and topology detection.
A company in California, took apart each channel of the inkjet head, and put each color channel on a contollable z axis motor that moved up and down following the topographical contours of geological maps they CNC'd. They shut down a few years ago... but a very clever printer. Entire head assembly moved in the traditional XY, they just modified the channels in the head to also travel in Z as it went back and forth. Custom modified printer for sure....
 

Smoke_Jaguar

Man who touches printers inappropriately.
With long-jetting heads, might be doable with dynamic controls to firing power. Would just require a relatively slow scan speed. That said, there are some HUGE printheads out there. Something like tilt would probably help a ton too, but overall, lots of demons to suss out.
 

dreko

New Member
Take a look at this incredible printer (1 of a kind)
1726372132866.png


1726372156354.png


I've tried to reach out to them, but unfortunately no response. I wanted to buy the printer from the now defunct company

Youtube link: youtu.be/oSDkOrfdWrI?si=NJD57JzNUoCbzXM9
 

Vassago

New Member
Take a look at this incredible printer (1 of a kind)
View attachment 173709

View attachment 173710

I've tried to reach out to them, but unfortunately no response. I wanted to buy the printer from the now defunct company

Youtube link: youtu.be/oSDkOrfdWrI?si=NJD57JzNUoCbzXM9
I remember the company.. Great idea, but ultimately obviously not making enough money from it - should be possible to recreate, just need to split colour away from z height and put head on z rail. It's all down to how much money you will (not could) make v cost of making such a machine.. I think that one used hp deskjet cartridges
 

dreko

New Member
They were in business for a very long time, produced many many topographical maps... I think the owner just retired... nothing about 'not making enough money from it'
Nevertheless... I wish someone would make a open source or conversion kit that was like this...
 

Smoke_Jaguar

Man who touches printers inappropriately.
Vaccuforming inks are probably considered to be the replacement, which is not a bad way to do it. However, articulating heads in that particular case are a pretty good idea as you're working with known geometry. Technically speaking, it wouldn't be terribly hard to replace such a system. Controls and the like aren't crazy hard to do, but firmware/software would be the crazier part.
 

netsol

Active Member
if you look at older posts, for a while, i was on a LETS JAILBREAK OUR PRINTER /CUTTERS KICK

i may have been ahead of my time

i believe it was just roland locking you out of setup menu...
 
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