Turntable uses needle to feel the “bumps” and turn it into sound, if the needle can feel dusts (which is why people always wipe them before playing), it can definitely feel the layer lines.
Dusts are like what single digit microns? while the best resolution for resin printer is at 10 microns.
which is why people always wipe them before playing
As an aside, don’t wipe records. While dust is unlikely to damage it, scraping something across the surface can cause scratches which can affect the playback. An air duster is your best bet 👍
The phrozen sonic 12k claims it can get down to .01 mm layers. I feel like that would have a decent shot. But I could be misinterpreting what that means for resin since I’ve never used it.
I get that it’s a joke, but can anyone eli5 why this wouldn’t work with modern resin printing resolutions?
Turntable uses needle to feel the “bumps” and turn it into sound, if the needle can feel dusts (which is why people always wipe them before playing), it can definitely feel the layer lines.
Dusts are like what single digit microns? while the best resolution for resin printer is at 10 microns.
As an aside, don’t wipe records. While dust is unlikely to damage it, scraping something across the surface can cause scratches which can affect the playback. An air duster is your best bet 👍
The grooves are like 0.04mm and the best resin printers are only down to 0.1mm. You could do it, but it probably would sound terrible.
The phrozen sonic 12k claims it can get down to .01 mm layers. I feel like that would have a decent shot. But I could be misinterpreting what that means for resin since I’ve never used it.
It works. This was 11 years ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQi8FUsZ8OY
For FDM sound quality is horrible but works too.
somewhere there is a script (github?) that generates the gcode files (somebody might reply with link to it).