Have you ever wondered if the yellow/orange plastic windows that all resin/SLA 3D printers have are sufficient?

Here’s your answer:

interesting data points:

  • 500nm: 54.9% (transmission)
  • 490nm: 37.9%
  • 480nm: 16.9%
  • 470nm: 1.6%
  • 460nm: 0.3%

**What does this mean? Feel free to comment. **

My take:

First of all, this instrument is not designed to measure OD, so it can barely measure down to OD3. The actual value for 400-450nm could be lower (e.g. 0.001-0.0001% transmission).

SLA 3D printers work at 405nm. This means that the enclosure will likely protect you from the UV radiation of the printer. This is good news.

Does it also protect the resin from sunlight? To answer this question, it is important to understand how the resin behaves to wavelengths above 460nm (not measured). In my practical experience, it does not provide adequate protection. Clean the vat after each print or add another light-blocking layer for (short-term) storage.-

  • @marcos
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    -61 year ago

    Please, don’t stay for long at the same room as you have UV emitters. And if you need to go into it, make sure you have plenty of visible lighting.

    Maybe your filter works, maybe it doesn’t. Maybe your printer is completely sealed off, maybe it’s leaking UV from some other part that you didn’t think to check. Just don’t take the chance, and plug it somewhere where you won’t be.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      I’m confused, are you implying that 3D printers are giving off harmful UV light? Because they only use UV-A, which is non-ionizing and won’t damage your skin any more than regular sunlight (actually, it’ll damage it less.)

      • @marcos
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        -71 year ago

        What is the impact of the light on your eyes?

        As a rule, avoid being on the same room as UV sources. Unless you are pretty sure that what you have is not damaging. But most people just buy a full printer; those have no idea at all.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 year ago

          Again, the impact is nothing more than that from a standard lightbulb. Should you stare right at the UV LED at full intensity? Probably not. But should a small amount shining through a filtered medium be of any concern? Not at all.