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Tips and Tricks: Heat-Set Inserts

2025-01-02 | By Lulzbot

License: See Original Project 3D Printing

Courtesy of LulzBot

Guide by Lulzbot

heatsetinsert_1

Integrating strong and reliable screw threading into your 3D designs is easy! Once ‎added to your workflow, you'll be quite attached.‎

Use brass Heat-Set Inserts to add threaded mounting points to your 3D printed objects. ‎While it is possible to thread bare plastic, repeated use can cause wear leading to ‎threading failure. Heat-Set Inserts are designed to be heated past the plastic glass ‎transition temperature and inserted into the plastic part. The heat is removed once the ‎insert is fully seated. As the insert cools the plastic solidifies, locking the insert into ‎place.‎

While specialized tools can be purchased for installing heat-set inserts, a soldering ‎iron will do the job easily and quickly.‎

Installation Instructions

heat-set-inserts

Items Needed:‎

‎ ‎Let's Begin!‎

  1. If available, choose a soldering iron tip large enough to provide a stable ‎pressure on the center of the heat-set insert, but small enough not to touch any ‎other part of the 3D printed object. Plug in your soldering iron and allow it to ‎come to temperature. Note: If possible, set your soldering iron to the filament ‎extrusion temperature used during 3D printing.‎

  2. Place the heat-set insert on the printed part with the smaller diameter facing ‎down into the hole.‎

  3. Touch the tip of the soldering iron to the top of the heat-set insert

  4. Wait for just a few seconds. The weight of the soldering iron should allow the ‎heat-set insert to settle into the mounting point.‎

  5. Slowly, gently, and evenly press down until the top of the heat-set insert is level ‎with the surrounding plastic.‎

  6. Remove heat and allow to cool.‎

That's it! A properly set heat-set insert will be flush to the surrounding plastic and ‎aligned with the fastener path.‎

Installation Tips

First Time User? Use tweezers to hold the heat-set insert level. You'll find that after a ‎few installations you can set the tweezers aside and let the soldering iron do all the ‎work.‎

Slower is Better: Go slow for a cleaner top surface. Molten plastic can flow around the ‎top surface of the heat-set insert if pressed in too quickly.‎

Load Up Your Iron: A soldering iron with a fine pointed tip can hold multiple heat-set ‎inserts at one time, increasing the rate at which you can install multiple successive ‎heat-set inserts. Note: the last heat-set insert will be the hottest-- stop pressing the ‎insert in earlier than the others.‎

Design Tips

Use Chamfered Edges: A chamfered edge on the heat-set insert location will leave ‎space for molten plastic near the external surface of the insert, improving the fit and ‎finish.‎

High Strength Applications: Think of the heat-set insert as a wedge. When stressed ‎the heat-set insert should push into the material, not out. Design the model so ‎the fastener passes through the object and into the heat-set insert-- the heat-set insert ‎is installed in the same direction as the future load.‎

Larger Inserts, Stronger Grip: Our internal testing suggests that larger heat-set inserts ‎will resist torque-out-- the larger surface area will help the insert from breaking free and ‎rotating within the plastic object.‎

Solid Walls, Solid Fit: Design the 3D printed heat-set mounting point with a wall ‎thickness set to a multiple of your extrusion width. This ensures that the walls will be ‎‎3D printed with solid perimeters with no voids from infill.‎

More Perimeters, More Hold: Find the balance between fine details and strength. Two ‎or more perimeters will give each heat-set insert more plastic to bite into and will also ‎increase the strength of the printed object.‎

Testing Documentation

Best Practices

Testing Platform Source

Testing Procedure

Testing Results

制造商零件编号 TOL-14456
SOLDERING IRON - 60W (ADJUSTABLE
SparkFun Electronics
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