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    Why high-resolution printers do not guarantee high-resolution parts

    Printer resolution does not define part resolution. Curing behavior and process control do.

    High-resolution 3D printers are often marketed as the primary driver of part quality.

    In reality, printer resolution defines only the potential. Actual part resolution is defined by curing behavior.

    Core principle

    XY pixel size or projected voxel size does not define the final feature size. Light propagation, curing depth and material response define what is actually printed.

    What printer resolution actually means

    Hardware defines theoretical limits

    Printer resolution is typically defined by pixel size (LCD/DLP) or laser spot size (SLA).

    What it represents

    The smallest addressable unit of light projection.

    This is not the same as the smallest achievable feature.

    Why real resolution is lower than nominal

    Light does not stay confined to a pixel

    Photopolymerization is not binary.

    Key effect

    Light spreads, scatters and penetrates beyond the projected pixel.

    This produces cured volumes larger than the nominal pixel size.

    The role of curing depth and lateral overgrowth

    Feature expansion is intrinsic to photopolymers

    Each exposure creates a cured volume, not a flat 2D projection.

    Observed effects

    Overcure in Z direction and lateral growth in XY direction.

    Fine details merge, edges soften and small gaps close.

    Material defines resolution, not only hardware

    Resin formulation controls light behavior

    Resolution depends strongly on how the resin interacts with light.

    Critical parameters

    Absorption profile, light blockers, photoinitiator system and scattering behavior.

    Without proper formulation, high-resolution hardware cannot translate into high-resolution parts.

    Why increasing resolution can worsen results

    Higher resolution increases sensitivity

    Smaller pixels require tighter control of curing behavior.

    Failure mode

    Overlapping cured regions, loss of contrast between pixels and reduced effective resolution.

    This is often misinterpreted as poor resin performance.

    The interaction with layer thickness

    Resolution is a 3D problem

    XY resolution and Z resolution are coupled through curing behavior.

    Key interaction

    Reducing layer thickness increases cumulative exposure and can degrade feature definition.

    See also layer thickness effects.

    Why calibration is required for real resolution

    Resolution must be measured, not assumed

    Real feature size depends on exposure conditions and printer state.

    Required approach

    Calibration of curing depth, lateral growth and exposure window.

    This is enabled by curing rate control.

    Resolution is a system property

    High-resolution printers do not guarantee high-resolution parts.

    Real resolution is defined by the interaction between material, light and process control.

    Without controlled curing, increasing hardware resolution does not improve results.

    Continue the engineering workflow

    Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series

    This technical bulletin is part of a structured framework connecting failure analysis, curing control and calibration.

    Continue reading