That's...sadly very familiar
That's...sadly very familiar
Well, at least it's only spaghetti and not a fat blob of death.
I had an SLS print fail rather spectacularly once
Whoops, my bad. I meant SLA, not SLS.This is SLS printing, not the more common FDM, but I think it's really interesting:
Here's praying he consumes people's impulse buying resistance I sold six nearly instantly.He will consume ALL your nervous energy, and still demand more.
--Patrick
So, any y'all got 50 grand kicking around (plus 7 grand for the deodorizer)?
The quantum leap in 3D printing tech man.
Years ago, my mom and I were spitballing about what the next truly disruptive technology would be. Kind of like how personal computers went from maybe a half dozen in a neighborhood to several in every home (if you count smart phones etc). I told her 3d printing.My buddy was showing me this stuff and it was mind boggling to me. It's still a far ways off of being consumer available but holy smokes.
viscosity...the nic juice is syrupy. The jig isn't air tight, so vapor-lock is not a problem. the problem is I get like 3 or 4 or these at a time, and I get tired of holding the nic juice up for a couple minutes for each one to make the transfer, so i made the little jig to take my arms out of the equation.Not sure if it's even a problem you're running into but would a small hole in the 3d printed coupler cap help speed up the flow rate from one to another, if it's slow due to the viscosity? Probably could be added easily with a drill even now.
Now do the restaurant ketchup thing! But also for shampoo, hand lotion, conditioner, hand soap, etc.another practical print
I vape. And I get my vape juice from a company in California because it's cheap and they have the flavors I like. The problem: California has some rules about flavored vapes and nicotine, so this company ships them separately (for you to mix yourself) in order to comply with the letter of the law.
The annoyance: nic juice is thick and syrupy, and the nic bottles are considerably smaller than the vape juice bottles, so you can't just rest one atop the other while the syrup all comes out. The solution: A quick-and-dirty measurement with calipers and a 5 minute print later:
View attachment 48835
Now the one bottle can sit up there as long as it needs to in order to fully drain into the other without my clumsy ass inevitably dropping one (which i manage to do every time I get a new order of this stuff in)
I could, if i had the need for such things...or if someone was willing to pay me to do itNow do the restaurant ketchup thing! But also for shampoo, hand lotion, conditioner, hand soap, etc.
--Patrick
DOOOOO ITTTTT!!!!!Once I get some more space I intend to get a resin one, a filament one and such too. I've been fiending to get into it for over a year now.
That's what I suspected. Do you do any post processing smoothing techniques or is everything just as it comes off the printer? Sorry for so many questions lol
Let me come back and talk a bit more about the biz.I try to pick models that require minimal post processing
for things with big curves, I try to use adaptive layer heights to minimize layer lines.
The folks in my area won't pay a lot for stuff, generally. So I try not to make things that will take a lot of my time once it comes off the print bed, because I can't justify the time spent versus the money I can get. My biggest sellers are $10.00 items.
Nice, I love repairing broken things with my 3D printer. It's honestly my favorite use case for it.no job is too small! lol
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Replacement button on a motorized scooter. I'm getting decent at Fusion. It actually took less time to measure with calipers and design than it took to print.