How to get a gloss finish on my 3D printed mould


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Matteo Dapporto
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Good afternoon

I've read all the topics in this forum but I'm still confused so I kindly ask an help.

I’m experimenting the production of a compression mould by using my 3D printer.
The part I want to manufacture is made by Carbon fiber and has 1.2mm thickness. I want to cure it at room temperature at the beginning and if everything is OK I will cure in a oven at 60°C in the future.

Here a picture of my 3D printed mould (made by ABS but I can choose different material  such as PLA, Polycarbonate, ASA and so on).
I have removed all the 3D printing layers and defects by using sand paper; here is how it looks like at the end of the sanding process:


I have applied 7 layers of releasant wax and polysh the mouls after the last one by using a clean cloth.
I have prepared a sandwich of carbon fiber and resin and put inside the compression mold and squeeze it by using 300Kg of weight; I cure it at room temperature.

Here the picture if my first carbon fiber trial part.
Please note that the right side has been painted because the CF part just out of the mould has a matte finish which I don't like at all (I want a gloss finish without any additional painting or polish treatment). I can see major defects which I think are due to a lack of material (my sandwich was too thin) and I'm not worry about it.



How can I get a gloss finish on my carbon fiber part just out of the mould ?
Is it true that the only way to get a gloss carbon fiber part is to have a gloss mould surface? If the answer is yes, can you explain me the reason ?

If I need to treat my 3D mould (ABS material) so it became gloss, which process and materials do I have to purchase?
I’ve read about filler and other stuff but I’m a little bit lost because normally a 3D printed mould is not commonly used.

Can I use S120 directly on the ABS (or PLA, Polycaronate, ect) mould or do I have to apply a primer first?
Or do I have to apply to the mould an epoxy resin first?
I'm a little bit lost and confused because all the info I found are not referred to compression mold and do not require a gloss finish carbon fiber part as I would like.

Thanks in advance for your help.

Edited 7 Years Ago by Matteo Dapporto
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Furrari
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Scottracing. I don’t use a vacuum bad when I’m annealing, as you say that can cause distortion. I just put each piece on a tray and cook it in the oven so there are no undue forces acting on the softened plastic. How this works on unsupported sections I don’t know. The longest/biggest job I have fully printed was an auxiliary diffuser wing 1.2m long. It was built in 8” sections, each part annealed and then the whole lot bonded together using mortise and tenon joints designed in the design stage. It was assembled on a flat board with each piece clamped down and to the next at the assembly stage. The clamping was done by making negative, matching, bridging pieces and clamping these down with bits of wood across them. There was a slight distortion at each of the joints bit I had made the outer layers 5 layers thick to allow for sanding. After sanding and painting it was carbon dipped.

It works very well, don’t know in terms of downforce as it was added to clean up the airflow at the back to stop the turbulence that picked up all the muck off the road and spread it all over the back of the car.
GO

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Matteo - 7 Years Ago
scottracing - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
Hanaldo - 7 Years Ago
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Hanaldo - 7 Years Ago
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Steve Broad - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
f1rob - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
f1rob - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
f1rob - 7 Years Ago
scottracing - 7 Years Ago
Furrari - 7 Years Ago
Furrari - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
SleepingAwake - 7 Years Ago
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
SleepingAwake - 7 Years Ago
                     Thanks for your help!
Matteo - 7 Years Ago
Furrari - 7 Years Ago
             End component of the diffuser.
Furrari - 7 Years Ago
scottracing - 7 Years Ago
Furrari - 7 Years Ago

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