Frameless comb

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Joined
Sep 4, 2011
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Location
Wiveliscombe
Hive Type
National
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Last weekend I was shown a package of what appeared to be perfectly-drawn super comb containing no honey (nor any obvious signs bees had actually been anywhere near it). Ten combs, all nicely rectangular, with perfectly smooth uncapped faces. I've never seen anything like it before. It looked as though the combs had been very cleanly uncapped to leave the surfaces smooth and parallel, perhaps then extracted and given back to the bees to clean up, and then cut from the frames.

The person to whom these combs originally belonged is sadly no longer available to ask, so does anyone have any idea why someone might do this? I was so surprised to see it that it didn't even occur to me to take a photo :D

James
 
:D Now there's an idea. I wonder if it could be made to work? Actually, I'm sure it could be made to work; the question is whether I might have the engineering skill to make it work... Probably not.

James
Actively cooled print chamber, and appropriate temperature nozzles, maybe fed with molten wax via small heated hoses.
 
Actively cooled print chamber, and appropriate temperature nozzles, maybe fed with molten wax via small heated hoses.

Yeah, but you'd presumably need to be able to do stuff that's possible with filament such as withdrawing the feed material too. Might be possible if you fed the molten wax to the print head using a piston, but then the piston chamber would have to be heated and how would you manage continuity of feed when the chamber was being refilled? Or would you need to start with a big enough chamber to hold all the wax required for the print run?

James
 
Alternatively, perhaps the wax could be extruded as a filament and treated in some way that would make it pliable, in which case it could perhaps be managed exactly the same as, say, PLA, but with a much lower print head temperature.

James
 
Last weekend I was shown a package of what appeared to be perfectly-drawn super comb containing no honey (nor any obvious signs bees had actually been anywhere near it). Ten combs, all nicely rectangular, with perfectly smooth uncapped faces. I've never seen anything like it before. It looked as though the combs had been very cleanly uncapped to leave the surfaces smooth and parallel, perhaps then extracted and given back to the bees to clean up, and then cut from the frames.

The person to whom these combs originally belonged is sadly no longer available to ask, so does anyone have any idea why someone might do this? I was so surprised to see it that it didn't even occur to me to take a photo :D

James
Where are they now -as in the combs, not the person?
 

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