select-print-material
À propos
Cette Compétence Claude aide les développeurs à sélectionner des matériaux d'impression 3D appropriés en comparant des propriétés telles que la résistance, la tenue en température et la compatibilité chimique parmi les filaments et résines courants. Elle guide le choix du matériau pour des besoins spécifiques comme une utilisation en extérieur, le contact alimentaire, ou l'équilibre entre facilité d'impression et performances. Utilisez-la pour diagnostiquer les échecs d'impression liés aux matériaux et faire des sélections éclairées pour des pièces fonctionnelles.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/select-print-materialCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Select Print Material
Choose 3D print material → match props to functional reqs. Covers FDM filaments (PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, TPU, Nylon) + SLA resins (standard, tough, flexible, castable) w/ detailed property compare for strength, temp, chemical, flex, post-process.
Use When
- Specific mechanical reqs (tensile, impact, flex)
- Temp-sensitive (hot|cold)
- Chemical|UV|outdoor exposure
- Food-safe|biocompat
- Balance printability vs perf for proto vs prod
- Troubleshoot material-related fails
- Optimize cost vs props for prod runs
In
- functional_requirements: Load type (tensile|compress|bend|torsion), magnitude, duty cycle
- environmental_conditions: Temp range, UV, chemical, moisture
- mechanical_properties_needed: Strength, flex, impact, fatigue
- surface_finish: Appearance, post-process
- printability_constraints: Printer caps (heated bed, enclosure), user level
- special_requirements: Food safe, biocompat, electrical, transparency
Do
1. ID Primary Req Category
Dominant req drives selection:
Mechanical Perf:
- High strength under load
- Impact|shock absorption
- Flex|elastic behavior
- Fatigue resistance (repeated load)
Env Durability:
- High|low temp
- UV|outdoor weathering
- Chemical (solvents, oils, acids)
- Moisture|water
Special Apps:
- Food contact safety
- Biocompat (medical)
- Electrical (insulation, conductivity)
- Optical (transparency, color)
Printability/Cost:
- Easy print for protos
- Min warp|support
- Low cost for large parts
- Wide availability
→ Primary req ID'd ("outdoor UV" or "high impact").
If err: multi reqs equally critical → decision matrix scoring (Step 6).
2. Material Filters
Filter 1: Process
- FDM: All thermoplastics
- SLA: All resins
- Printer constraints: Heated bed (60-110°C) for ABS|ASA|Nylon; enclosure for ABS|ASA
Filter 2: Temp Range
Operating Temperature → Minimum Material Glass Transition (Tg):
< 45°C: PLA, PLA+, Standard Resin, Tough Resin
< 60°C: PETG, Flexible Resin
< 80°C: ABS, ASA, CPE
< 100°C: Nylon, Polycarbonate, High-Temp Resin
> 100°C: PEEK, PEI (Ultem) - specialty printers only
Filter 3: Mechanical
High tensile strength: Nylon > ABS/ASA > PETG > PLA > TPU
High impact resistance: Nylon > PETG > ABS > ASA > PLA
Flexibility: TPU > Flexible Resin > PLA (brittle)
Fatigue resistance: Nylon > PETG > ABS > PLA
Filter 4: Env
UV resistance: ASA > PETG > ABS > PLA (poor)
Chemical resistance: Nylon > PETG > ABS/ASA > PLA
Outdoor durability: ASA > Nylon > PETG > PLA (degrades)
Moisture resistance: ABS/ASA > PETG > PLA > Nylon (hygroscopic)
→ 2-5 candidates remain.
If err: no material passes → relax least-critical req or post-process (UV coat for PLA).
3. Compare Properties
FDM Filament Properties
| Material | Print Temp | Bed Temp | Tensile Strength | Elongation | Tg/HDT | UV Resist | Ease | Hygroscopic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA | 190-220°C | 50-60°C | 50-70 MPa | 5-7% | 55-60°C | Poor | Easy | Low |
| PLA+ | 200-230°C | 50-60°C | 60-75 MPa | 10-15% | 60-65°C | Poor | Easy | Low |
| PETG | 220-250°C | 70-85°C | 50-60 MPa | 15-20% | 75-80°C | Good | Medium | Medium |
| ABS | 230-260°C | 95-110°C | 40-50 MPa | 20-40% | 95-105°C | Fair | Hard | Low |
| ASA | 240-260°C | 95-110°C | 45-55 MPa | 15-30% | 95-105°C | Excellent | Hard | Low |
| TPU | 210-230°C | 40-60°C | 30-50 MPa | 400-600% | 60-80°C | Good | Medium | Low |
| Nylon | 240-270°C | 70-90°C | 70-80 MPa | 50-150% | 75-90°C | Excellent | Hard | Very High |
Notes:
- Tensile: Higher = stronger pull
- Elongation: Higher = more flex before break
- Tg/HDT: Glass transition|heat deflection temp (max op)
- Ease: Print difficulty (warp, adhesion, stringing, supports)
- Hygroscopic: Water absorb (needs dry box)
SLA Resin Properties
| Resin Type | Cure Time | Tensile Strength | Elongation | HDT | Hardness | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | 2-4s | 45-55 MPa | 6-8% | 60-70°C | 82-85 Shore D | Miniatures, prototypes |
| Tough | 4-6s | 55-65 MPa | 15-25% | 70-80°C | 80-85 Shore D | Functional parts, snaps |
| Flexible | 6-8s | 5-10 MPa | 80-120% | 50-60°C | 60-70 Shore A | Gaskets, grips |
| High-Temp | 8-12s | 60-70 MPa | 6-10% | 120-150°C | 85-88 Shore D | Heat-resistant parts |
| Castable | 3-5s | 35-45 MPa | 8-12% | 60°C | 80 Shore D | Jewelry (lost-wax) |
→ Props compared, 1-3 top candidates ID'd.
If err: props unclear → manufacturer datasheets via WebFetch.
4. Eval Printability Tradeoffs
Easy (PLA, PLA+):
- Min warp, good bed adhesion
- Wide temp tolerance
- Low stringing, easy supports
- Beginner|proto ideal
- Tradeoff: Lower temp resist, UV degrade, brittle
Medium (PETG, TPU):
- Mod warp (PETG needs 70°C+ bed)
- Some stringing (tune retraction)
- TPU needs direct drive + slow speed
- Good strength-ease ratio
- Tradeoff: PETG strings, TPU hard overhangs
Hard (ABS, ASA, Nylon):
- Severe warp w/o enclosure
- Strong fumes (ABS|ASA need ventilation)
- Nylon extremely hygroscopic (dry box req)
- High bed temps (95-110°C) + chamber heat
- Tradeoff: Excellent mechanical+env
Cost:
Material cost per kg (typical):
PLA: $15-25
PETG: $20-30
ABS: $18-28
ASA: $25-35
TPU: $30-45
Nylon: $35-55
Standard Resin: $30-50/L
Specialty Resin: $60-150/L
→ Printability vs printer caps + user. Decision balances perf vs constraints.
If err: material too hard for setup → easier alt + design changes (thicker walls, fillets).
5. Special Reqs
Food Safety:
- Safe printed correctly: PLA, PETG (w/ food-safe additives)
- Never safe: ABS, ASA (toxic additives), Nylon (porous)
- Reqs: Food-safe nozzles (stainless not brass), seal w/ food-safe epoxy
- Note: FDM layers trap bacteria — SLA smooth resin better
Biocompat (medical|dental):
- FDM: Nylon (some grades), PLA (limited)
- SLA: Medical-grade certified resins
- Warning: Home 3D not sterile; consult regs for medical
Electrical:
- Insulation: PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA all good (>10^14 Ω·m)
- Conductivity: Conductive filaments (carbon black, metal-fill)
- Notes: Moisture (Nylon) ↓insulation
Transparency:
- FDM: Nearly impossible (layer scatter); thin walls + extensive polish
- SLA: Clear resins → transparency w/ post-process (sand|polish|coat)
UV Resist:
- Excellent: ASA, Nylon
- Good: PETG, TPU
- Poor: PLA, ABS
→ Special reqs verified vs caps.
If err: doesn't meet → post-process (UV-resist coat on PLA) or diff material.
6. Final Selection Decision Matrix
Score candidates across weighted criteria:
Outdoor functional part example:
| Criterion | Weight | PLA | PETG | ABS | ASA | Nylon |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UV Resistance | 30% | 1 | 6 | 5 | 10 | 9 |
| Strength | 25% | 6 | 7 | 6 | 7 | 9 |
| Printability | 20% | 10 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| Temperature | 15% | 2 | 6 | 8 | 8 | 9 |
| Cost | 10% | 10 | 8 | 8 | 6 | 4 |
| Weighted Total | 5.35 | 6.80 | 5.90 | 7.25 | 7.45 |
Score: 1 (poor) → 10 (excellent)
Decision: Nylon highest (7.45) but ASA (7.25) close + better printability. Select ASA if enclosure, else PETG (6.80).
→ Final selected w/ documented rationale.
If err: unclear → default PETG (FDM) or Tough Resin (SLA) — best all-around.
7. Document Settings
FDM template:
material: PETG
brand: "PolyMaker PolyLite"
color: "Blue"
nozzle_temp: 245°C
bed_temp: 80°C
chamber_temp: ambient
print_speed: 50mm/s
retraction_distance: 4.5mm
retraction_speed: 40mm/s
cooling: 50% (after layer 3)
notes: "Strings moderately, Z-hop helps. Dried 6h at 65°C."
SLA template:
resin: "Anycubic Tough Resin"
color: "Clear"
layer_height: 0.05mm
exposure_time: 6s
bottom_exposure: 40s
lift_distance: 6mm
lift_speed: 65mm/min
notes: "Post-cure 15min at 60°C for full strength. Brittle without cure."
→ Settings documented in project notes|slicer profile.
If err: start manufacturer recommended → iterate + document.
Check
- Primary req ID'd (mech|env|special)
- Candidates filtered by process, temp, reqs
- Props compared via table|datasheet
- Printability vs printer caps
- Special reqs checked
- Final via decision matrix w/ weighted priorities
- Settings documented for reproducibility
- Cost + availability verified for quantity
Traps
- PLA for everything: Easy but unsuitable >50°C, outdoor, long-term durability
- Ignore hygroscopy: Nylon+TPU absorb moisture → bubbling, poor adhesion, brittle. Dry box.
- ABS w/o enclosure: Severe warp w/o heated chamber; ASA slightly better but still needs
- Assume food safety: FDM porous traps bacteria; true safety needs sealing|SLA smooth
- Over-design strength: Expensive Nylon when PETG enough; overkill wastes $ + adds difficulty
- Underestimate temp: Parts near motors, heated beds, cars reach 60°C+ → PLA softens
- UV neglect: PLA+ABS yellow+degrade in sun within months; use ASA or coat
- Wet filament: Moisture → steam bubbles in extruder, weak adhesion, stringing — always dry hygroscopic
- Ignore fumes: ABS+ASA emit styrene; needs active ventilation
- Resin handling: Uncured = skin sensitizer + toxic; always gloves + ventilated
→
- prepare-print-model: Slicer settings for material
- troubleshoot-print-issues: Fix material fails
- Dry Filament (future): Drying for hygroscopic
- Post-Process 3D Prints (future): Sand, vapor smooth, paint, anneal
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
llamaguard
AutreLlamaGuard est le modèle de Meta, doté de 7 à 8 milliards de paramètres, conçu pour modérer les entrées et sorties des LLM selon six catégories de sécurité comme la violence et les discours haineux. Il offre une précision de 94 à 95 % et peut être déployé avec vLLM, Hugging Face ou Amazon SageMaker. Utilisez cette compétence pour intégrer facilement le filtrage de contenu et des garde-fous de sécurité dans vos applications d'IA.
cost-optimization
AutreCette compétence de Claude aide les développeurs à optimiser les coûts du cloud grâce au redimensionnement des ressources, aux stratégies d'étiquetage et à l'analyse des dépenses. Elle fournit un cadre pour réduire les dépenses cloud et mettre en œuvre une gouvernance des coûts sur AWS, Azure et GCP. Utilisez-la lorsque vous devez analyser les coûts d'infrastructure, redimensionner les ressources ou respecter des contraintes budgétaires.
quantizing-models-bitsandbytes
AutreCette compétence quantifie les LLMs en précision 8 bits ou 4 bits à l'aide de bitsandbytes, permettant une réduction de 50 à 75 % de la mémoire utilisée avec une perte de précision minime. Elle est idéale pour exécuter des modèles plus volumineux sur une mémoire GPU limitée ou pour accélérer l'inférence, prenant en charge des formats comme INT8, NF4 et FP4. La compétence s'intègre à HuggingFace Transformers et permet l'entraînement QLoRA ainsi que l'utilisation d'optimiseurs en 8 bits.
dispatching-parallel-agents
AutreCette compétence Claude déploie plusieurs agents pour enquêter et résoudre simultanément 3 problèmes indépendants ou plus. Elle est conçue pour des scénarios impliquant des défaillances non liées qui peuvent être résolues sans état partagé ni dépendances. La capacité fondamentale est la résolution de problèmes en parallèle, en assignant un agent par domaine problématique indépendant afin de maximiser l'efficacité.
