Skip to content

Slide 001: Introduction to Slicing Software

Slide Visual

Introduction to Slicing Software

Slide Overview

This slide introduces students to slicing software — the critical intermediary between a 3D model and a physical print. Students will learn what slicers do, how they convert mesh files into machine-readable instructions, and which slicer platforms are most commonly used in professional and educational makerspaces.

Instruction Notes

What Is a Slicer?

A slicer is software that converts a 3D model file (typically STL, OBJ, or 3MF format) into G-code — a set of sequential instructions that tell the 3D printer exactly how to move, extrude, heat, and cool during a print job. The term "slicing" refers to the process of dividing the 3D model into horizontal layers, each typically between 0.08mm and 0.32mm thick for FDM printing.

How Slicing Works

The slicer analyzes the mesh geometry and generates toolpaths for each layer. For every layer, it calculates: - Perimeter paths (outer walls): Typically 2-4 walls at 0.4mm width for a standard 0.4mm nozzle - Infill patterns: Internal structure (grid, gyroid, triangles, lightning) at densities from 5% to 100% - Support structures: Auto-generated or manually placed geometry to support overhangs beyond 45-55° - Travel moves: Non-printing movements between features, optimized to reduce stringing

Common Slicer Platforms

Slicer Developer Key Strength Cost
UltiMaker Cura UltiMaker Massive community, plugin ecosystem Free
PrusaSlicer Prusa Research Advanced features, SLA support Free
OrcaSlicer Community Fork Multi-color, Klipper integration Free
Bambu Studio Bambu Lab Bambu printer optimization Free
Simplify3D Simplify3D Fine-grained control $199

File Format Pipeline

The standard workflow is: CAD Software (STEP/F3D) → Export (STL/3MF) → Slicer (slice settings) → G-code (machine instructions) → Printer. The 3MF format is increasingly preferred over STL because it preserves color, material, and build-plate positioning data.

Key Talking Points

  1. A slicer is the bridge between digital design and physical fabrication — no print happens without it
  2. G-code contains every movement, temperature change, and extrusion command the printer will execute
  3. Choosing the right slicer depends on your printer ecosystem, but the core concepts are universal across all platforms

Learning Objectives (Concept Check)

  • [ ] Students can explain what slicing software does and why it is necessary
  • [ ] Students can identify at least three common slicer platforms and their distinguishing features
  • [ ] Students can describe the file format pipeline from CAD model to G-code

Last Updated: 2026-03-19