I spent a couple hours learning FreeCAD and designed this pen holder for my spouse. They were super happy with it. If people want I can provide the CAD and STL files....
Due to reasons… I’ve “adopted” a CR10s that a friend had bought. It was used, and was already well on it’s way to being a janky Printer of Theseus. My hope is to get it up and running and put through it’s paces before the holidays so I can give it back as a gift....
This is the base of a pumpkin. There is a little support where the over hang is a bit much to start. How did I get great smoosh on the support but not the first layer of the actual print?! They’re the same layer!
I’m currently printing a thing with black PLA and it might not be enough. Can I put black PETG in there when it runs out and continue like nothing happened? I’d adjust the nozzle temperature, of course.
Three years ago I looked into properly wiring hotends with quick toolhead swapes and came up with this: Combining the entire hotend wiring into 3x shielded 4-conductor cables (thin cables for small drag chains with tiny bending radius) and options to terminate the shield. The static side features an USB-port to retrofit...
Here’s a part of a cabinet in my wardrobe where my printer lives. It’s a bit noisy with all those hard surfaces so I am just about to put up some foam padding on all 5 sides....
Anyone have any solutions for this issue? You’d think it would just bridge over the entire hole, don’t know why it’s doing this. We’re at 195mm height here and I’d rather not run a support the entire height of the model just for this little nub....
(I’ve been informed that I had been told complete BS by the person trying to tell me that resin printing 1:72 wargame minis would be stupidly expensive. As such, my question here is no longer relevant.)...
They haven’t said why. I’m very curious. I hope it’s just a branding thing and not a sellout. I really like the community atmosphere and that is not a trade show.
Printed on Elegoo Neptune 3. Primed with 3 layers of high build/filler primer and wet sanded. Painted with Duplicolor Inferno Red/Rust-oleum Metallic Gold. Washed with a diy dark wash. Then coated with semigloss clear.