Resins used in 3D printing are generally very absorbent to UV light due to the printing process using 405 nm light. They are many times peaks of absorption at 405 nm and around 350 nm. So if you use a light around 375 it would still get absorbed much less. Keep in mind that UV for long periods can degrade these resins.
Thanks for the information. Appreciate it :) About what degradation you are talkig about? Will it become blury or fragile? Cause it is really important. Also, do u think 20mW is the power that can cause visible degradation?
Can you please avoid stupid titles like these? 'avoid this mistake' - its clickbait trash. Regarding UV and fluorescent paint - 365nm works best for excitation, keep using that, for duplicating/printing there is not much choice here - all good and bright paint are more or less ceramic in nature and the only suitable process is 'screen printing'.
@@VEC7ORlt Thank you for a suggestion, but It is too long for a youtube 😅I changed the title a little. I believe it fits the video better now. But you have to remember that youtube as a platform kinda pushes everyone to make a clickbait names and thumbnails. Otherwise it is hard to stand out
@@NickElectronics No one is special, and everyone is - in the end how do you even find anything meaningful if all titles are clickbait? How do I avoid this mistake I don't even know I'm making? Wait, that doesn't make any sense. Oh wait I'm not supposed to be searching - just watch this here and bitch in the comments, is that the face of YT these days?