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Programmable Filament for Multicolor Printing

A recent research paper shows a way to create multicolor 3D prints using a single extruder if you are too lazy to babysit the machine and switch filament. The concept: print your own “programmable” filament that has the right colors in the right place. This is the same idea as manually splicing filament but presumably is more efficient since the process works with one color at a time and doesn’t repeat. In other words, to print the 64 squares of a chessboard you’d swap filament at least 64 times on each layer. Using programmable filament, you’d load one spool, print half of the filament, load another spool, print the other half, and then finally load the newly created filament and print the chessboard. Notice that the first two operations aren’t printing the chessboard. They are printing the spool of filament you feed through on the third pass.
There are machines made to do this, of course, although they generally just splice lengths of filament together for you automatically. Using one filament solves the problems of keeping multiple heads in alignment as well as the added cost and complexity. However, you now have different problems such as the transition between materials and knowing exactly how much material will be at each point in the print.
We wondered how much filament you can print spooled up on a reasonable size print bed. According to the paper:
The maximum length of a printed filament is highly dependent on the build area given the type of 3D printer. With a 300×300 mm bed size, a printed filament in a spiral shape can be approximately 20-m long.
Printing the working filament is time-consuming, too. The paper reports that a boat that took two hours to print required five hours to print the programmable filament. Still better than swapping a bunch of plastic by hand, we suppose.
Oddly enough, the inspiration for this paper came from an Instructable. If you plan to try this, you might want to watch the videos there about printing hexagonal filaments with different colors.
If the idea of printing filament seems strange, we’ve seen it before. Of course, you don’t need any equipment at all if you are patient and willing to lie about it.read more

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