Glass and Brittle Plastics - ABS 3-D printer material on floor
My Engineering department is asking me about the possibility of using ABS 3-D printer material on floor.....specifically over production lines in automation equipment. Does anyone have any experience with this, how I would document it or if I should suggest they use a different material? I would greatly appreciate some advice.
I know what ABS 3-D Printer Material is, however I am not clear on what you are asking.
@SQFconsultant - is this material safe to use over our production lines? We are producing primary packaging. If it is okay, does it need to be included in our Glass and Brittle Plastics list? I appreciate your help.
My Engineering department is asking me about the possibility of using ABS 3-D printer material on floor.....specifically over production lines in automation equipment. Does anyone have any experience with this, how I would document it or if I should suggest they use a different material? I would greatly appreciate some advice.
I don't know what it is.
For non-slip around glass bottling production ?
We product thin-walled flexible thermoformed plastic containers. Our Engineering department has developed 3D printed cups for their automation to pick up the parts off the conveyor to move them to packaging. They wanted to know if this material needed to be added to our Glass and Brittle Plastics register. I am unfamiliar with the ABS material they are using for the automation cups. I just want to add them to my register if they need to be. Thank you.
My Engineering department is asking me about the possibility of using ABS 3-D printer material on floor.....specifically over production lines in automation equipment. Does anyone have any experience with this, how I would document it or if I should suggest they use a different material? I would greatly appreciate some advice.
A thing to keep in mind about 3d printed materials is that there are very small layer lines on all prints. This makes all 3d printed materials nearly impossible to clean and sanitize, creating many harborage points for bacteria. If this is something that isn't coming into direct contact with finished goods, I say, it's all good.
ABS is not brittle like glass, and should not shatter under large stresses.
From a quick search, looks like it is pretty strong durable material and thus unlikely to break. I'd ask your engineers to provide an example or test piece for you to evaluate. That way you can look at it. Also ask them to show you specifically where they intend on putting them and have them show you. By doing these you can make a proper assessment and see if there is a risk or not.