EN
  • Čeština
  • Español
  • Italiano
  • Deutsch
  • Polski
  • Français
Login

Hollowing

Relevant for:
Last updated 3 years ago
This article is also available in following languages: 
CSPLESDEITFR

All objects sliced for the SLA printers are completely solid by default. There is no infill pattern like in FFF/FDM 3D printing. Solid objects printed from the liquid resin can be heavy and robust, but the resin consumption is high compared to hollow objects, especially when printing large models.

Hollowing out your 3D model is a great way to:

  • save a considerable amount of material (lowers the print price)
  • lower the surface area of each layer - which decreases the force needed to detach the print from the display when moving to the next layer
  • reduce the number of needed supports (lower weight of printed model)

We suggest adding at least two drainage holes. Without them, the uncured resin would end up being trapped inside your finished print.

You need PrusaSlicer 2.2 or newer to access the Hollowing tool.

Using the Hollowing tool

Hollowing can be configured for each model individually using the Hollowing tool in the left toolbar. Alternatively, you can configure hollowing for all models at once in Print Settings - Hollowing.

The hollowing and drainage hole workflow is non-destructive. Hollowing can be canceled and drainage holes can be moved or removed at any time.

The model hollowing is configured with the following parameters:

Hollowing thickness

The thickness of the resulting shell. The minimum value is 1 mm.

Hollowing accuracy

A trade-off between accuracy and performance. If a low hollowing accuracy is set, the resulting model wall thickness may be uneven. Therefore a higher hollowing accuracy is recommended for a small hollowing thickness (for thin shells) to ensure minimum wall thickness.

Hollowing closing distance

Hollowing suppresses cavities narrower than the closing distance threshold, and it also fills in sharp concave corners of the inner wall, from which it would otherwise be difficult to remove the uncured highly viscous resin.

Adding drainage holes

Drainage holes can be added by left-clicking on the object when the SLA hollowing gizmo is active.

The holes can later be repositioned by dragging them on the mesh.

Each hole is always perpendicular to the surface and its diameter and depth can be configured - the current settings will be used for newly placed holes.

You can remove holes by right-clicking on any of them.

You can add holes even to models that have hollowing disabled. This is useful for models that you have hollowed in an external program.

If you need to input an exact value or the slider does not have enough range for your, you can Ctrl+Left click the value to edit it.

Please understand that if the input mesh is broken, the hole drilling algorithm may refuse to proceed in order to prevent program crashes or incorrect results.

Confirm and preview the hollowed mesh

The hollowing and hole-drilling are performed after the Preview hollowed and drilled model button is pressed. Note that both hollowing and hole-drilling are computationally expensive tasks and will take some time, especially with complex models. In case the user does not press the button himself, the hollowing and drilling will be performed during the slicing process.

The Clipping plane tool can be used to peek inside an object (the same tool is present in the SLA support points editing gizmo). Move the slider from left to right to move the clipping plane. You can review the hollowed geometry and place the drainage holes appropriately.

The Reset direction button will align the clipping plane tool parallel to the current camera view. E.g. if you want to have the clipping plane moving up-down, look at the model from the top (Top view 1 ) and hit the Reset direction button.

The Reset direction button is only visible if you move the Clipping plane tool to a non-zero value.

You can export the hollowed and drilled model by selecting File - Export - Export plate as STL.
Changing a parameter will force an invalidation of the mesh (such as moving a hole, scaling the object, etc.). The model visualization reverts to the original object without the holes drilled and without the hollowing applied.

Solid vs hollowed model example

Solid model: 237 ml, $13.75 resin cost

Hollowed model: 81 ml, $4.70 resin cost

Hellboy bust model by fotismint
 
The hollowing and hole drilling features rely on OpenVDB and CGAL libraries. Many thanks to the authors of the two libraries.
Was this article helpful?

Comments

Related

Still have questions?

Still have questions?

If you have a question about something that isn't covered here, check out our additional resources.
And if that doesn't do the trick, you can send an inquiry to [email protected] or through the button below.

Contact us