this post was submitted on 01 Oct 2023
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(I've been informed that I had been told complete BS by the person trying to tell me that resin printing 1:72 wargame minis would be stupidly expensive. As such, my question here is no longer relevant.)

I am considering the option to get back into miniature painting by starting with 3D printing my own custom figures.

Given the price difference, it would have to be plastic (I read PLA is a good option), and for my purposes it would mostly be 1:72 scale figures.

The deciding factor is whether at such a small scale PLA can achieve a level of detail that doesn't look completely terrible. I'm used to 1:72 injection mold figures, and my previous paint work in the past was always so thick that much of the detail present on those would disappear anyway. So I'm really not looking for much.

But looking for existing images of such prints is very much not search engine friendly and I mostly just come up with Chinese soldier figures made out of some mystery material or figures of unknown scale.

Can anyone help me to find some reference pictures of 1:72 PLA figures so I can take a look if this level of detail is acceptable for me?

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Then the unhelpful gatekeeper on Mastodon was not only extremely rude, but also talking complete nonsense.

Thanks.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

The Internet do be like that.

My only suggestion is to look at health precautions with resin printing, I'm pretty sure ventilation is absolutely necessary and the liquids hazardous, but I too could be talking nonsense.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have both a resin printer and a FDM printer, I can confirm the price difference exists, but is not prohibitive (resin is about 2x PLA). The difference of quality is mind blowing, though (in favor of resin printer). If you're building an army, I assume you will have many pieces? If so, the difference of printing time is also mind blowing in favor of resin printer. The reason for that being that if you print 10x the same mini on your build surface, with FDM it will take 10x the same time as a single mini (the printing head must move to cover each point) while with the MSLA (resin printer), it will take… 1x the same time. That's because each layer is flashed from a PNG image, so all points of a layer are created at the same time. On top of that, there are things you can do with resin that you just can't with FDM, especially because of supports needed for hanging parts : if your character has arms, chances are the hand will be lower than the shoulder, which means than when printing from bottom to top, the hand won't be connected to the body until printing reaches the shoulder, so you need something to support it (a "tower" under the hand, that you will cut off). It's easy to do with resin, because in a bath of dense liquid, Archimedes is your friend and you can build the support in wild angles, but it's way more difficult in thin air (with a FDM).

An other thing to know, though, is that resin printing is way more messy. You will manipulate toxic products, that you can't throw in the sink, you need gear to cover your hands and face, and resin ends up everywhere and is near impossible to clean. But it's worth it, especially if you're into minis. :) FDM, on the other hand, is unbeatable for functional prints (because those resin prints are damn fragile, and tend to not be perfectly at the scale you designed).

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

You are welcome! I know there are many serious miniature painters who still don't find the quality of a 4k resin printer acceptable; I am not one of them. However, even pro miniature painters are content with 8k printers which can still be reasonably priced when on sale.