Abstract
The aim of the presented research is to assess the possibility of manufacturing thin-walled models using innovative 3D printing technology and to determine limitations. This article presents the results of tensile tests of the Continuous Filament Fabrication (CFF) technology for thin-walled sample models. Two types of materials were tested. The first material is pure ONYX based on polyamide, and the second is ONYX with an additional core made of carbon fiber. The paper presents the limitations of using the core in thin-walled structures, and for pure ONYX material, samples were made with different orientations on the 3D printer platform, which allowed determining the effect of the printing direction on the mechanical properties of the samples. In addition, microscopic photographs of the fracture of the broken samples were taken in the paper, based on which the defects of the technological process were identified. It was shown that the strength of thin-walled samples (1 mm, 1.4 mm, and 1.8 mm thick) printed in the Y direction is significantly greater than that of samples printed in the X and Z directions. For example, for 1 mm thick samples printed in the Y direction, the strength is 49.02 MPa, while for samples printed in the X and Z directions, it is 27.71 MPa and 21.28 MPa, respectively. The strength of samples (4 mm thick) reinforced with ONYX + OCF carbon fiber printed in the X direction is 191.36% greater than that of samples made of pure ONYX.