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    Why exposure time is not a universal parameter in resin 3D printing

    Exposure time is not a fixed parameter. It is a system-dependent variable.

    Exposure time is often treated as a simple setting. In reality, it is one of the most misunderstood parameters in resin 3D printing.

    The same exposure time does not produce the same result across different printers, materials or conditions.

    Core principle

    Exposure time has no meaning without irradiance. The same time can deliver completely different energy depending on the system.

    Why exposure time appears to work

    Local optimization hides system variability

    Users often find an exposure time that works on their specific printer.

    What is happening

    The setting is valid only for that exact combination of printer, resin, geometry and conditions.

    This creates the illusion that exposure time is a transferable parameter.

    Why exposure time is not transferable

    Energy delivery is not constant

    Exposure time does not define how much energy reaches the resin.

    Key variables

    Light intensity, wavelength distribution, optical efficiency, screen aging and spatial non-uniformity.

    As explained in power differences between DLP, LCD and MLCD printers, identical exposure times can result in very different curing behavior.

    The real parameter: energy dose

    Time must be interpreted with power

    What defines curing is not time alone, but energy per unit area.

    Implication

    Two printers with different irradiance will require different exposure times to achieve the same curing result.

    This is directly linked to curing behavior as the dominant variable.

    Typical failure cases

    When exposure time is copied

    Using exposure settings from another user or printer often leads to failure.

    Common outcomes

    Loss of detail, overcuring, dimensional inaccuracy, weak layers or inconsistent results across the build platform.

    This connects with printer-to-printer variability.

    Why fixed settings degrade over time

    Exposure drift is unavoidable

    Even if exposure time is initially correct, it will not remain stable.

    Causes

    Light source aging, temperature variation, optical degradation and process changes.

    This means that fixed exposure values lose validity over time.

    What actually works

    Exposure must be calibrated, not assumed

    Reliable workflows do not rely on fixed exposure times.

    Correct approach

    Measure curing response, define exposure windows and adapt settings to the real printer condition.

    This is the basis of controlled workflows instead of trial-and-error.

    Exposure time is not a universal parameter

    Time alone does not define curing. Energy does.

    In resin 3D printing, exposure settings must be interpreted within the full system context. Without calibration, exposure time becomes an unreliable and misleading parameter.

    Continue the engineering workflow

    Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series

    This technical bulletin is part of a broader engineering framework connecting failure analysis, curing control, calibration, validation and scalable additive manufacturing workflows.

    Continue reading