
sidesh0wb0b
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to clarify, the mill will be milling our frames regardless.That seems like a lot of wear and tear on your mill for the price of a frame.?
to clarify, the mill will be milling our frames regardless.That seems like a lot of wear and tear on your mill for the price of a frame.?
I would try Denture Crafters in Blue Springs, MO. Or try Edmonds Dental is Springfield, MO. We have been using Edmonds for over 15 years and have always experienced receiving quality work!Hello… Im looking for a good Framework Lab to outsource my metal partials.. turn around less than 2weeks please. I am located in Orlando Fl. Please Pm price list and turn around time.. thanks
we do acetal and nylon and peek already.People still want a hunk of chrome in their mouth? Im not selling the farm to mill chrome partials, and I have 2 mills that can do it, but what a nightmare that sounds like. Why not acetal or nylon or even better PEEK?
That seems like a lot of wear and tear on your mill for the price of a frame.?
LOL - I'm with you Affinity, not my first choice. But our lab did over 7,000 CoCr frames last year. It's a quality affordable option for many patients especially when given Medicaid or low insurance options. Acetal is not covered by Medicaid nor are flexible partials. If you really can afford it, you obviously go with implants but metal is still highly functional as an option.People still want a hunk of chrome in their mouth? Im not selling the farm to mill chrome partials, and I have 2 mills that can do it, but what a nightmare that sounds like. Why not acetal or nylon or even better PEEK?
@evanosu has been great to work with. Frames are consistent, communication is good, price is right.Thank you so much for the compliment!
Thank you for the compliment!! We'll keep doing our best!@evanosu has been great to work with. Frames are consistent, communication is good, price is right.![]()
sheeew thats a lot of metal frames! we are not that big of an operation, as @Affinity can attest to.LOL - I'm with you Affinity, not my first choice. But our lab did over 7,000 CoCr frames last year. It's a quality affordable option for many patients especially when given Medicaid or low insurance options. Acetal is not covered by Medicaid nor are flexible partials. If you really can afford it, you obviously go with implants but metal is still highly functional as an option.
From the outside looking in- seems like quite a monetary investment . I typically do 2-3 frames per month. Either Dr's. or myself design- then I send them out to a partial mill- they are servicable and shiny so cost for value is good.As a point of reference when considering milling vs sintering:
For around 100k you can purchase your own laser sintering machine. With the cost of an oven (not a burnout furnace!) you're looking at $150k.
There is more to the annealing process than what is described above. If that is the process that works for 3DRPD that's great but it doesn't sound like the temp is hot enough to relieve stress and removing the parts from the buildplate before relieving the stress could create problems with the fitting.
A better description of the annealing process for SLM production:
Insert the production platform with the manufactured objects into a suitable oven @ 650°C. Raise the temperature to 800°C over 12 minutes and hold for 15 minutes. Reduce the temp to 550C over 15 minutes. Once 550C is reached the platform can be removed from the oven for further processing.
I would love for you to do my frames if in my budget!I use 3drpd which laser sinters the frames. They seem to be doing ok.
is it rough on the tongue or what? maybe it doesnt polish as well, Ive never done one.did nearly 50 peek ones, 48 came back cause the pt hated how it felt in their mouth.