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Thanks for the response!
Yeah, I wouldn't want to 3d print a ball for my dog to chew and slobber on. I was only thinking about 3d printing a mold and using that mold to make a ball out of... something. Are you thinking a 3d-printed mold might leave bits of plastic or additives in the molded item and so even that wouldn't be safe? Might making one ball from the mold just to throw away before making the second ball to give to the dog mitigate some of those issues? (Or even throw away the first two or three.)
I've also heard of people using food-safe coatings on 3d printed things. I could maybe use something like that on the mold before using it to make a ball.
But also, it's disappointing to hear there might not really be any material out there durable enough that could be done without really specialized machinery. Still helpful to know, though. Might save me from investing too much in that approach. Ha!
I guess another approach I might take might be to fashion a ball out of something that's already vulcanized rubber. Maybe tying rubber tubing (like they use to make scary-powerful slingshots) into a monkey's fist knot?
Hmm hmm hmm. Whatever the case, this gives me a lot more to think about, at least. Thanks again for weighing in!
(And I love the 3DPrinting Lemmy community! I print a lot with my two Ender printers and design a lot of my own models.)
I might be wrong about this, but I seem to remember an episode of How It's Made that showed the process of injection molded rubber. It might have been for tires. But the process required intense heat and pressure. It's not like making lost wax castings or epoxy in silicone molds. Even plastic injection molds can be done on a small scale, but rubber seems like it needs industrial scale machinery.