• 1 month

    Buy a 3d printer pen. Believe it or not they are pretty great at filling the spaces as long as the spaces are not too complicated or wide.

    • I came here to say this. Mine was, I think, name brand and it was only $35 and I’ve already used it to fix a few broken and flawed prints. Heat the filament up a little extra and you can squish it in place with the proper implememt without much if any trouble.

  • You need some kind of filler if you want seams to disappear, like bondo. The filler will be ugly though so you’re going to need paint for sure.

    Clever design can make seams less visible but the joints are always going to be there to some degree.

    Or just live with the seams lol.

    Fixing your warping/shrinking will make them less visible too.

  • 1 month

    I used a mixture of baking soda+super glue which you can apply using a small spatula. This would require sanding afterwards of course and ideally painting, but it worked for me.

  • 1 month

    Print using a scarf joint so the seams have an overlap. Also that would get them up off the build plate where your warping problem is.

  • 1 month

    If it’s a straight edge and the measurements don’t have to be too precise I would just sand the edge flat, personally

      • 1 month

        I was going to suggest solvent welding, unfortunately PLA’s solvent is extremely toxic. Were this ABS or ASA you could mix acetone and some raw fillament to get this gloop-like mixture. Fill the gap, let it dry and you have a solid bond as strong as if it was printed in one piece. Can also be used as a glue and is just as strong.

  • 1 month

    Can you remove material from the left side of the joint? That would close the gap on the right.

  • 1 month

    Print a 1 or 2 layer thick rectangle the length of the seam. Maybe 1cm wide. and glue on top. Sort of like how you use tape.