I have followed various open source projects to produce filament this way for a few years, starting from a facebook group.
It is called "pultrusion". A key property of PET plastic is that it is not infinitely re-meltable, it gets more brittle each time. If you melt bottles to form filament, then melt it again when printing, those two re-melts are too much.
But, you can heat it enough to soften it without truly melting it -- so it does not loose strength -- and pull it through a heated nozzle, that kind of wraps the little strip around into a tube, sometimes with a small hollow center like a straw.
There is then one full melt left in the plastic's life to allow a 3D printing.
You might have to adjust for the filament being hollow and extrude a bit more.
You also get a filament with a shorter length, just the plastic from one bottle, because joining the filaments is finicky and no one seems to have come up with a reliable way yet.
In spite of all this, it's really appealing because getting one more human use out of the vast volume of PET bottles that are thrown away seems really useful.
Note, that the strips that you cut the bottles into, are useful by themselves. There are a series of youtube videos by a Russian guy building a log cabin in the woods, and he utilizes those strips extensively -- if you use them to tie things together, you can pour hot water on them or heat them with a flame and they will shrink and stick to themselves, making a really strong joint.
Maybe I'm an idiot, but I was really struggling to understand how this worked from the website, which seems to have no photos or video of it actually operating.
I searched youtube and found a youtube short of it being used.
First you have to use another small machine to slice up a plastic bottle into a spool of roughly formed plastic spaghetti. Then you feed it through the nozzle on this machine to draw it into a properly formed filament.
Having to slice up every plastic bottle you want to run through it by hand seems like a cost to using it in any kind of bulk (I originally was trying to work out if it melted them down which would alleviate that).
There's a small 3D-printing niche of PET #1 bottle cutting specifically for filament making. For whatever reason, they mostly seem to organize on Facebook.[1] A lot of these builds can be made out of scrap components.
The Recreator3D[2] somewhat automates the bottle cutting, feeding, and filament making. Older versions repurpose a specific 3D printer's hardware, but the MK6[3] uses largely off-the-shelf parts.
Igor Tylman sells kit and fully-assembled PETmachines that cut, feed, and pullstrude filament.[4]
This is a really cool project, but obviously don't expect the same quality of filament as a big company. The width will vary across the length, leading to inconsistencies in the final part.
Looks interesting. Just bought a tiny 3D printer and had to by my first spools of filament after running out of the sample spool that cam with the printer. I do not think I will go this way (I am not printing much) but it is nice to see this sort of thing.
Also from the link (I just thought it was a little funny and answered a question I had)
> "Do all plastic bottles work?
Yes, as long as the bottle is made of PET. But the bigger the bottle the more filament can be made per bottle! Plus don’t forget, any colour of bottle will work!
RobGR|1 year ago
It is called "pultrusion". A key property of PET plastic is that it is not infinitely re-meltable, it gets more brittle each time. If you melt bottles to form filament, then melt it again when printing, those two re-melts are too much.
But, you can heat it enough to soften it without truly melting it -- so it does not loose strength -- and pull it through a heated nozzle, that kind of wraps the little strip around into a tube, sometimes with a small hollow center like a straw.
There is then one full melt left in the plastic's life to allow a 3D printing.
You might have to adjust for the filament being hollow and extrude a bit more.
You also get a filament with a shorter length, just the plastic from one bottle, because joining the filaments is finicky and no one seems to have come up with a reliable way yet.
In spite of all this, it's really appealing because getting one more human use out of the vast volume of PET bottles that are thrown away seems really useful.
Note, that the strips that you cut the bottles into, are useful by themselves. There are a series of youtube videos by a Russian guy building a log cabin in the woods, and he utilizes those strips extensively -- if you use them to tie things together, you can pour hot water on them or heat them with a flame and they will shrink and stick to themselves, making a really strong joint.
starkparker|1 year ago
Advoko? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSBh77bjz_Q
schiffern|1 year ago
So where are all our old plastic bottles? Mostly, we're wearing them.
pseudonymcoward|1 year ago
I searched youtube and found a youtube short of it being used.
First you have to use another small machine to slice up a plastic bottle into a spool of roughly formed plastic spaghetti. Then you feed it through the nozzle on this machine to draw it into a properly formed filament.
Having to slice up every plastic bottle you want to run through it by hand seems like a cost to using it in any kind of bulk (I originally was trying to work out if it melted them down which would alleviate that).
starkparker|1 year ago
The Recreator3D[2] somewhat automates the bottle cutting, feeding, and filament making. Older versions repurpose a specific 3D printer's hardware, but the MK6[3] uses largely off-the-shelf parts.
Igor Tylman sells kit and fully-assembled PETmachines that cut, feed, and pullstrude filament.[4]
1: http://PPU3D.com, which just redirects to https://www.facebook.com/groups/petpultrudersunited
2: http://recreator3d.com/
3: https://www.printables.com/model/352729-the-recreator-3d-mk6...
4: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1851116187/petmachine-fully-ass... with a pretty thorough demonstration at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUcZyOWUzcY
bdcravens|1 year ago
One thing to consider is that PET isn't the same as PETG, and may require changes when printing, and possibly additional ventilation
https://all3dp.com/2/pet-vs-petg-differences-simply-explaine...
stavros|1 year ago
tocs3|1 year ago
Also from the link (I just thought it was a little funny and answered a question I had)
> "Do all plastic bottles work?
Yes, as long as the bottle is made of PET. But the bigger the bottle the more filament can be made per bottle! Plus don’t forget, any colour of bottle will work!
kazinator|1 year ago
If I lose 10 cents by turning a 500 ml bottle into filament, will I get at least 10 cents worth of filament out of it?
imtringued|1 year ago