The power of the chamfer

freecad bevel.png

One of the problems that you can have when 3D printing is called the “elephant’s foot” problem. It is caused because the very first layer is usually printed very slowly and is very thick, causing it to spread out slightly. This leads to the side of the object having a profile that looks a bit like an elephants foot. Which I suppose explains the name…

I’ve found that one way to fix (or perhaps hide) this effect is to apply a “chamfer” to the printing face. This makes the first print layer slightly smaller and hides the foot effect. The chamfer is easy to perform in FreeCAD. You select the Part view in the Workbench and then select the chamfer option (it’s blue and looks like a chamfer (a corner with the edge flattened off). You can then select the face that of the object that you want to chamfer and you can get the rounded appearance you can see on the left hand shape in the design above. One day I’ll figure out how to do this from Python inside FreeCAD and then add it to the part design program.

chamfer.png

Then I print using a “brim” which is a bit of print around the outline of the object which helps it stick to the print bed. When the print has cooled I cut the brim off with some sharp scissors and this makes the edges look quite neat as you can see above.