Can we recreate the $2500 airless basketball on a Hobbyist 3D Printer?

2024 ж. 22 Нау.
17 687 Рет қаралды

In this video, we set out to discover a filament capable of mimicking the bounce of a basketball. While the original airless basketball an unique design, can we replicate its properties using an FDM printer? Join us as we explore various filament materials to find one that closely mimics the bounce of a real basketball.
Patreon: / twomoose
Files used
www.printables.com/model/7974...
www.printables.com/model/7886...
@UncleJessy • Can you 3D Print your ...
Filaments used
Best options
Flashforge has been in and out of stock
Flashforge Flexible PLA: amzn.to/3VwCmPg
SUNLU TPU 95A: amzn.to/3PyQio6
Other filaments used
ASA:amzn.to/3TNcgWC
Overture super pla: amzn.to/3IRFaPo
Atristia Flexible PLA: amzn.to/3TYkuM1
Ranki TPU 98A: amzn.to/3vl7bvx
Printers used:
Creality K1 MAX: amzn.to/4aOKuzQ
Creality K1 MAX: bitly.ws/3ejjs
QIDI X Max 3: bitly.ws/3eH4Z
QIDI X Max 3: amzn.to/4bQ7QFE
QIDI Q1 Pro: shrsl.com/4gpo3
Amazon: amzn.to/3Txv2Qu
Bambu labs X1C with AMS: shrsl.com/4hxdm
Bambu P1S: shrsl.com/4hxdk
3D printing Accessories:
Sunlu pla plus: amzn.to/3uL3GOF
Sunlu Filament dryer: amzn.to/3PwzihX
Large Sunlu Dryer: amzn.to/3PUKIwv
Creality Dryer: amzn.to/3VuiTyp
Brim Remover: amzn.to/3TRH1dK
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#airlessbasketball #3dprinter #Basketball

Пікірлер
  • TPC is the best filament I've found. It bounces really well and holds up for a long time.

    @PartyLime@PartyLimeАй бұрын
    • I’ll look into that! Thanks for watching

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • I think it's hard to get hold of in the US. FormFortura FlexiFil is TPC I believe. If you find my model of the ball on Printables or Makerworld I've uploaded a gif of it bouncing there

      @PartyLime@PartyLimeАй бұрын
    • @@TwoMooseDesign no such thing as we can't make the airless basketball. thats quitter talk

      @honda-s2k@honda-s2k19 күн бұрын
  • I 3D printed that airless basketball out of PA12, but it was way too hard and it broke. I've done a lot of research and the best filament I could find was the TPU CF from Extrudr, with a hardness of 58D. It's somewhere between normal TPU and PLA Flex. This filament probably bounces perfectly and the carbon fibers make it more durable. I think it's worth a try.

    @christian455@christian455Ай бұрын
    • Interesting! Thanks for the input. 👊🏼👊🏼

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • Best filament for the Airless Basketball I’ve seen was with PP. Immediately ordered some and looking forward to printing this weekend!

      @ThaifulacLP@ThaifulacLPАй бұрын
    • Any update?

      @Grimmy1477@Grimmy1477Ай бұрын
    • Any update?

      @rickyneeter69@rickyneeter6915 күн бұрын
    • @@rickyneeter69 sorry but Ihave some problems with my 3D printer and as a student I can't afford the TPU cf just for one try. Maybe someone else wanna try it.

      @christian455@christian45513 күн бұрын
  • I would’ve never thought about trying this. Interesting experiment

    @RobSandstromDesigns@RobSandstromDesignsАй бұрын
    • Thanks for watching! It was pretty fun, and a little stressful 😆 I learned a ton making these!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • It'd be worth looking at the actual airless prototype...it appears to have quite a bit of internal structure that gives it a similar collapse profile to an air filled ball (i.e. it gets harder to compress the more you compress it). I'm interested to see how close you can get! Good luck, and thanks for the entertainment. :)

    @jimmassey140@jimmassey140Ай бұрын
  • The ball needs a hard interior made of a strong a durable material (PaCf-6 maybe) and then needs a softer flexible exterior like tpu. The science is too much to explain but it will allow the harder material to flex more without breaking. This is the same concept that's used in fiber optic cable wherein the core is glass (yes hard brittle glass) but has a flexible polyacrylate sheath or something similar which takes strain off the glass and allows it to be flexible.

    @icemaster127@icemaster127Ай бұрын
    • How do you print that?

      @sabotage3d@sabotage3d28 күн бұрын
    • @@sabotage3d my best guess would be a multi material print system like the Bambu AMS. Unfortunately I not all that skilled in modeling nor do I have an AMS. But it would essentially just be making the infill solid and of a different material.

      @icemaster127@icemaster12727 күн бұрын
    • @@icemaster127 AMS doesn't support soft materials, they also won't bond well together.

      @sabotage3d@sabotage3d27 күн бұрын
  • I don't know how many times i've told people this, but you have to use PEBA. It has the highest energy return out of all filaments, second to chinchilla.

    @win15968@win15968Күн бұрын
  • hey mam. first time i see your videos keep it up the good job. i can tell you why all of the balls you print fail. the reason is way simpler than just the filament. the original wilson ball was a second smaller ball inside who touch the outside(like a centimeter from the exterior) this gives the ball the stability to bounce like spring.

    @roknoemo@roknoemo29 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for the tips!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesign28 күн бұрын
  • I lol'd with she tried to dribble the 2nd ball

    @marksierra3522@marksierra3522Ай бұрын
    • same lol

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • using flash forge flexible pla filament I have had best results just using a pretty standard pla profile and just running the speeds and temp a little lower.

    @crashoveride1043@crashoveride1043Ай бұрын
    • Interesting, I’ll play around with that thanks!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • Hey there! This video on 3D printing is awesome! It got me thinking about a wild idea: what if we could print objects layer by layer, but from the inside out? Imagine a 3D printer on steroids, with a spinning mold and robotic arms depositing materials. We could create super intricate mechanisms or even build entire structures floor by floor with spray concrete. This "layered construction" approach could be a game-changer for fabrication! #layeredprinting #futureofconstruction

    @desiraedibble3657@desiraedibble3657Ай бұрын
    • That would be amazing!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • @@TwoMooseDesign build a object from inside out layer by layer with spinning vat.

      @desiraedibble3657@desiraedibble3657Ай бұрын
  • Let me know your opinions on the airless basketballs and types of filament! I most likley wont make basketball another video as all the filament is expensive and they take forever to print but I would love someone else to expand on it and hopefully come up with better options. Thanks for watching!

    @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • What about 2-material print? With like inner "core" (eg flexible PLA) and a "shell" (TPU?) fused to it? Totally doable with AMS or MMU

      @pfabiszewski@pfabiszewskiАй бұрын
  • Since it don’t need to be exactly the same maybe try adding multiple layers(thin) with different materials to create the bounce and durability.

    @Suns1-yb5um@Suns1-yb5umАй бұрын
  • Try SEBS 95A. Or PEBA

    @JonWilliams84@JonWilliams84Ай бұрын
    • I’ll check that out

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • Agreed, been waiting to see a PEBA one.

      @ajciccone88@ajciccone88Ай бұрын
  • ASA with actual layer adhesion will be perfect for this. You need an 80C chamber and LOTS of cooling to print it with properly. Regular printers are not going to cut it. You need a Voron or something with parts that can take 80C and with a lot of insulation. Proper nylon would be ideal but it's difficult to print with fdm. Even in a 100C chamber it will shrink and fuck with you.

    @sabahoudini@sabahoudiniАй бұрын
    • What about PEBA?

      @zakparamir755@zakparamir755Ай бұрын
    • @@zakparamir755 No, flexible filaments won't bounce. It needs to be fairly stiff but with impact strength. ASA or ABS but printed properly in a very hot chamber will do the trick.

      @sabahoudini@sabahoudiniАй бұрын
    • @@zakparamir755 PETG might work too if printed in a 50-60C chamber.

      @sabahoudini@sabahoudiniАй бұрын
  • Someone who tested this ball said that it smells exactly like a new shoe.

    @tristano.2901@tristano.2901Ай бұрын
    • 😆😆 i guess it’s not a bad smell

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • Use TPE at 50-100% infill.

    @vexedgriffin9668@vexedgriffin9668Ай бұрын
    • Expensive filament but worth I think, it's bounce and durability is nuts

      @vexedgriffin9668@vexedgriffin9668Ай бұрын
  • 🤘🤘🤘🤘

    @myhermitlife@myhermitlifeАй бұрын
    • Thanks for stopping by!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • I would like to see how super hard 70D hardness or greater bounces

    @isaacboucher5147@isaacboucher5147Ай бұрын
    • I looked and a lot of those were hard to find. There was one brand but it was over seas and expensive. Maybe I wasn’t looking in the right places lol

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • china will make one for 100.00

    @peterpeter5666@peterpeter5666Ай бұрын
    • Oh for sure, someone with money to burn will absolutely knock it off lol

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • Or less

      @nahtanoj92@nahtanoj92Ай бұрын
    • 0.01 cent

      @isaiahreinmiller9311@isaiahreinmiller931121 күн бұрын
  • as any1 done nylon?

    @kennykd97@kennykd97Ай бұрын
    • I have not but would be cool to see someone try!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • @@TwoMooseDesign I recon that's the best 1 to try.

      @kennykd97@kennykd97Ай бұрын
    • I am right now using PA6 and have pa6-cf coming this week. So far it seems really promising. Polypropylene could also be a decent option too but right now I am testing a range of nylons to see what I can discover. The Wilson ball is a nylon blend so hoping that its workable. I'm not doing it for money myself, I run a business that helps companies develop prototypes and this is a great opportunity for me to demonstrate on a project that we know the end goal is possible, as well as showcase FDM technology even though it's not the right choice for this project really

      @chrisbaker3760@chrisbaker3760Ай бұрын
  • Flashforge Flexable PLA was the best option to my knowledge/ testing. It has been in and out of stock over the last week so if you're interested use this affiliate link or check it out on amazon. amzn.to/3VwCmPg

    @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
    • PEBA is the filament that you need to make this actually work. It isn't super difficult to print, just be warned, it isn't exactly cheap. You're also printing the wrong model, the correct model had an internal lattice which I'd connected to the external ball so it's almost a ball inside a ball but that allows it to behave like a composite which I MUCH thicker effective wall thickness.

      @hot_wheelz@hot_wheelzАй бұрын
    • @@hot_wheelzI’ll check that out!

      @TwoMooseDesign@TwoMooseDesignАй бұрын
  • You think that with the filaments that are on the market, you will make a ball (it costs 2.5K). Well, what are you kidding, you need to develop special filaments, make them, test them, and you know all this just to fill up space on KZhead, but thanks for making me laugh

    @user-ht6eg3bz1h@user-ht6eg3bz1hАй бұрын
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