I had new progressive lenses made, but the old ones are still fine and don’t have a scratch. They’re just a bit weak at near distance, but otherwise perfectly serviceable.

So I made new frames for them because I don’t like to throw away things that work.

All assembled, the frames weigh 3.5 grams, and 14 grams with the lenses mounted.

This was printed with a Prusa Mk4 and regular PLA at 0.15 mm layer height. The hinges use simple 10x1 pins - and I worked my magic to print the holes horizontally to the final dimension with interference fit, so no reaming or drilling is necessary. These glasses are straight out of the printer with zero rework.

I think they look pretty good as they are. If anybody notices they’re 3D-printed, I’ll say I’m gunning for that particular style 🙂

The front of the frames prints in 11 minutes and both temples in 12 minutes. I could break and make a new pair every day for the rest of my life and it would still be faster and cheaper than going to Specsavers only once.

43 points

You’re a printer, harry

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8 points
*

Hermione: No Harry, like this

🪄 Reprapario

Or, if you want new ones

🪄 Cuono Deponefacio Exemplum

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11 points

Actually, there is a company that makes resin printed children’s glasses for about €200 a pop. My son tried them at the opticians and I was impressed by the finish and flexibility. Just to say that 3d printed glasses are really commercially viable.

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10 points

there is a company that makes resin printed children’s glasses for about €200 a pop

Commercial, high-quality 3D-printed glasses are sold everywhere here in town - including for adults. And they look pretty good too. But I’m more interested in making stuff myself - and for pennies too. What’s the fun in buying ready-made? 🙂

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6 points

Spectacular! Well done!

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I see what you did there.

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1 point

Thanks! 😊

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6 points

These are cool.

I wonder how these would do if you printed in ABS and then used acetone in a makeshift vapor chamber to smooth and somewhat anneal them?

I think, with them being smoother, they’d be somewhat more comfortable

Although PETG would probably last longer overall since it has some flex/give to it but not sure if there’s any process that lets you “smooth” it like you can with ABS.

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8 points
*

Well I could do a lot of things, but one of my hobbies is to model stuff that prints out all ready to go as much as possible. This design uses small metal hinge pins only because printed-in-place functional hinges would be huge.

But otherwise I like that it’s only 3 parts that print quick, don’t require any rework, and still open up to accept the lenses, orient the lenses (I have astigmatism so my lenses need to be rotated exactly right, and if you look carefully on the inside of the hinge, the V groove is interrupted to match a notch in the lens’ bevel, which also contributes to lock the rim closed) and everything holds together smartly with only those two pins.

So yeah, I could do extra work to make them look nicer, but I’m kind of proud to display how I managed to make them look straight out of the printer.

Not to mention, I’m lazy too 🙂

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4 points

And you know what? That’s a great design philosophy.

Simple and repeatable. Besides you don’t want to risk more expensive lenses with more breakable parts (so the metal hinges make sense)

Lazy wouldn’t have made them so I’d call it efficient use of your time.

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5 points

When you smooth you do give up some dimensional accuracy.

These days, I more or less exclusively print ASA and PETG. I would call the ASA tougher than PETG, but PETG’s ability to stick to itself when printing makes me prefer it for thin parts. In my experience, PETG also allows for more elastic (temporary/recoverable) deformation before the part undergoes plastic (permanent) deformation.

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4 points

I have a wall mount for some a pretty hefty stepping stool and it’s been going strong for a few years.

PETG really does handle that well while similar things I’ve printer in PLA broke even with layer line orientation and a lot of walls.

Good stuff.

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3 points

I’ve had similar experiences. PLA is very stiff, which also makes it brittle. I have quite a few functional PETG that have been going strong for years. Now that I can print ASA too, some of my newer functional prints are transitioning materials.

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3 points

What about PCTG? Pretty much for anything that I’d need more strength than regular PETG I could go with PETG-CF or PCTG. The only thing that can force me to use ABS/ASA is the need for (more) temperature resistance.

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3 points

I’ve never heard of PCTG before. A quick Google search and I’ll probably be ordering a spool.

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4 points

You can smooth PETG with Methylene Chloride, but I would not suggest handling things without proper training and knowledge first

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4 points

Yeah. Even with acetone you want to be mindful. Nasty stuff and not to be played with lightly.

But interesting application if you can do it safely.

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3 points

Yes boss! And PLA can be smoothed using clorophorm. Another solution not to handle without safety training

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6 points

Did you throw in the glasses mid-print? Or how are they fixed?

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13 points

I’m not OP but if you look close to the outer edges of the frame where they meet at the hinge you can see that the front frame is not “sealed” and lenses can be inserted this way and then fixed with the hinge pin. That’s my guess.

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11 points

Exactly right.

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5 points

Nice design. Now is the comfort for long wear? May I ask where you get the lenses from?

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7 points
*

No, the rims have a standard hide-a-bevel groove all around, and the hinges are split. You can see it in the 3D model. The lens is inserted into the groove and the hinge is closed by mounting the temple part of the hinge.

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