Bounder wants $500 for their fenders
Yennek wrote:A couple weeks ago I tried designing and 3D printing some fenders for my wife's Bounder out of TPU. Not totally happy with how they turned out, but better than nothing. Needs some minor tweaks, but the biggest issue I'm having is that they need to be a little longer, but I can't print any larger on my printer.

emilevirus wrote:Yennek wrote:A couple weeks ago I tried designing and 3D printing some fenders for my wife's Bounder out of TPU. Not totally happy with how they turned out, but better than nothing. Needs some minor tweaks, but the biggest issue I'm having is that they need to be a little longer, but I can't print any larger on my printer.
You could print them in two parts. I just used an abs sheet. Looks OK.
Out of curiosity, what thickness ABS did you use? And did you just use a heat gun to soften it to bend?
And you bring up a good point about printing in two parts. I've been trying to figure out how I want to do it. I don't want mechanical type fasteners. Glues generally don't work on TPU, because the they don't hold well and dry rigid, which sort of defeats the reason of using a flexible filament. I could probably put like a plastic welding tip in my soldering gun, but that sounds sort of tedious. I think what I am settling on is to do solvent welding. TPU holds up to most solvents but it sounds like THF works the best from what I've read. But I can't find a good (pure), reasonably priced source locally. A lot of PVC cements are 30-50% THF, but I think I have found a PVC cement for shower pan liners that is ~70% THF at a local hardware store. So I may be doing some experiments with that this weekend.
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