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- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 68 comments
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Hot Glue Guns (Score:3)
Until consumer 3D printers get beyond glorified hot glue guns I won't be buying one.
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I get redirected to http://robots-everywhere.com/r... [robots-everywhere.com] where I have no idea what you are referring to.
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http://robots-everywhere.com/r... [robots-everywhere.com]
I'd guess
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Come off it. This is /. - everyone has to click that link once!
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Actually I've managed to avoid goatse... After getting hit with tubgirl, I've always been paranoid about links...
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Time to explain Goatse (Score:2)
Let me explain it as safe-for-work as I can: Goatse (Guy Opens Anus To Scare Everyone) is a not-safe-for-work photo of a man bending over and stretching his solid waste exit to resemble the cover of the "America's Border" issue of Time magazine [SFW] [time.com].
Ob3DPrinting: Yes, people have used 3D printing to make sculptures of Goatse and Tubgirl [SFW with links to NSFW original] [3dprintingindustry.com].
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Mine doubles as a laser cutter. It takes up a small closet with the ancillaries (smoke detector, filament spools, old pc to run it etc.) and it's awesome if I need a gasket or a project box.
http://www.f3.to/ [f3.to] if you want to see the laser cutter thing.
Ah yes, another "Laser cutter" that can only cut paper and leaves burned edges? No thanks.
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3/16" ?
Wood and acrylic?
I'm sure it was a lot of work. I'm not dissing what you've accomplished. I'm questioning its usefulness. I don't want it, even if it's free.
If a tool doesn't solve a problem it's not a tool at all.
This does everything yours does but better:
http://www.instructables.com/i... [instructables.com]
But you know... without starting fires. ...and that's just the first one I found on google.
There's no reason to use a laser at all. I've been using CNC mills since the early 80s. I've used "real" laser mills, and ev
Re:Hot Glue Guns (Score:4, Interesting)
Until consumer 3D printers get beyond glorified hot glue guns I won't be buying one.
Wow, until you learn the difference between a Fuse Deposition Modeling (FDM) 3D printer and a "hot glue gun" no one wants you owning one anyway!
Consumers can buy any commercially available 3D printer out there, so define consumer 3D printer while you're at it. There are 3D printers that use liquid material to start with that are in the $5k-$100k range with a build volume of approx. 6in x 9in x 8in and up. There's the 3D Systems ProJet series [3dsystems.com] at the bottom end to mid range, and then there's the Objet series from Stratasys [stratasys.com] at the higher end.
Makerbots are a joke compared to the machines by Stratasys in particular. I worked supporting an FDM Dimension 1200es SST and a brand new Objet30. There were MakerBots and 3D Ssytem CubeX printers all over the place where I worked and they were either offline sitting on a desk somewhere because they never produced a good part, or they were producing crappy parts for students. You get what you pay for with 3D printers right now. That and most people don't understand that they low end printers fail for two primary reasons: 1. Bad environmental control of the room it's in (the air temp and humidty in the room *HAS* to be kept within the range specified for operation; putting these in large rooms with highly variable environmental conditions causes failure), and 2. They don't properly store their materials to prevent moisture uptake (the PLA and ABS materials will absorb moisture from the air and cause clogging; even worse is the support material as its uptake is typically higher and will completely encase your print head if you're not careful).
You have a lot to learn, it would seem, if you think 3D printers are nothig but glorified glue guns.
Re:Hot Glue Guns (Score:5, Interesting)
Wow, until you learn the difference between a Fuse Deposition Modeling (FDM) 3D printer and a "hot glue gun" no one wants you owning one anyway!
To me consumer grade FDM is a glorified hot glue gun attached to a positioning system. The only difference is plastic is extruded instead of glue.
Consumers can buy any commercially available 3D printer out there, so define consumer 3D printer while you're at it.
Printer cost of under $1000. IE what the average consumer can spend on a personal printer.
There's the 3D Systems ProJet series
Sorry but $6,000 is out of most people's price range.
I worked supporting an FDM Dimension 1200es SST
A printer package for that costs $32,000. That is far out of reach of your average consumer. Remember the poll is about an individual owning a 3D printer.
You have a lot to learn, it would seem, if you think 3D printers are nothig but glorified glue guns.
I said that consumer grade 3D printers are just glorified glue guns. Industry grade FDM is much better but much more expensive ($32,000 is a heck of a lot more than than $1000) than consumer grade and therefore different. To use a car analogy, you are talking about Cadillac costs when most consumers can only afford a Yugo.
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Consumers can buy any commercially available 3D printer out there, so define consumer 3D printer while you're at it.
Printer cost of under $1000. IE what the average consumer can spend on a personal printer.
The average consumer of 3D printers may be able to, the average consumer of personal printers in no way can afford to spend $1,000 on a printer.
Re:Hot Glue Guns (Score:4, Insightful)
Producers purchase the methods of production all the time. All producers consume some input and produce some output for the general public, up to and including consuming the labor of consumers. Consumers are end product purchasers.
In market terminology, consumers represent the great majority of individual purchasers. This means middle-class, usually; everyone above middle-class can purchase middle-class goods, and there are relatively few poor people. Most goods extend down by having different grades which are targeted to lower-income consumers, expanding the market. When the market shrinks such that most consumers can't buy or aren't interested in a certain product (for example: a $3 million Ferrari or an extremely-specialized $50 vacuum tube), it's no longer a "Consumer good"; expensive consumer goods become "Luxury goods", and others become military or commercial goods.
A consumer-grade 3D printer would be a printer at a price point whereby it is useful to consumers. A producer making 500,000 copies of something he can sell will pay $50,000 for a 3D printer that can produce them for a total amortized cost of less than $10 each; a consumer needing one copy of a few trinkets may not pay $1,000 for a printer to produce 30 or 40 goods he could buy for a grand total of $200. If the great many available 3D templates appear which are useful to consumers and cheaper to fabricate than purchase, a 3D printer with low enough cost will appeal to consumers and become a consumer-grade good.
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a consumer needing one copy of a few trinkets may not pay $1,000 for a printer to produce 30 or 40 goods he could buy for a grand total of $200. If the great many available 3D templates appear which are useful to consumers and cheaper to fabricate than purchase, a 3D printer with low enough cost will appeal to consumers and become a consumer-grade good.
And if it's anything like a paper printer, does it have plastic jams the way we have paper jams? Clogged nozzles? Low "ink" or whatever the consumable is? Driver problems? Compatibility problems between template any my printer? To be fair purchasing is not without its problems either, but mass produced trinkets are usually done better by somebody else. And the odds of cost being lower is close to none, just like it costs way more idea to print your own book on your average home printer than buying it in the
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Mass-production of small pieces like pen caps and battery doors is unlikely. They produce enough for stock in manufacture; but they don't have a distribution procedure for sending replacements. The disruption costs several dollars just to send one thing, plus you get charged $5 to ship via FedEx or USPS or whatnot; it's not like they have a fulfillment center set up that's rapidly sending out small plastic bits to people, marginalizing the human labor costs in the process.
Mass-production of PLA filament
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A Citizen's Dividend of 14.5% would end poverty.
14.5% of what?
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Of citizens, of course. Every year, remove the 14.5% poorest citizens. There you have it, poverty ended!
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Unfortunately poverty is defined by relative wealth, so until you kill everyone but the richest person, there will still be poverty.
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Only by socialists.
Today's people living in poverty have wealth I could only dream of as a child. Shit, people in poverty in the UK have colour television, cars, new clothes.. Very much unlike my childhood.
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Absolute Poverty is defined by access to the basic needs of life, such as food, shelter, clothing.
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The "hot glue gun" is just a tiny part, namely the extruder hot end. Add to that a precision (computer-controlled) feed mechanism for the "glue", temperature regulation to work optimally with different feed rates and "glue" types, and a precision, high-speed, XYZ positioning mechanism for that "glue gun" (and optionally, additional "glue guns" so you can switch materials in mid print), together with a computer and firmware to drive all, and you're approaching what even the lowest-end consumer 3D printer d
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The "hot glue gun" is just a tiny part, namely the extruder hot end.
Yet it is the most important and weakest link in the system. It does not matter what is around it if the extruder produces weak objects at a very high failure rate.
Perfect? Of course not, not any more than a cheap consumer Epson or Brother printer is compared to an Espresso Book Machine.
Even low cost printers produce documents that are readable every time. Depending on the environmental conditions the failure rate for consumer 3D printers can be very high.
a makerbot that doesn't make! (Score:2)
I have a high end makerbot that broke within a few months.
makerbot has never returned any of my support calls. they have never responded to any of my emails for support.
maybe they are trying to run out the warranty before responding.
terrible customer service.
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If i could see a reasonable use for one at home, I might consider buying one, but I don't, so I don't.
3D printer owners: What is the most useful thing you've printed, how long did it take, and how much did it cost (factoring in the purchase price of the printer divided by how many successful prints you have actually done)?
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The most useful part I've printed is probably a repair part for a dishwasher. It was a plastic clip, and the manufacturer only wanted to sell the complete drawer assembly for $400 per drawer, so a little measuring and CAD saved me $800.
Whoever's saying that 3D printed parts can't be durable is out of date. Old-school PLA was pretty fragile, but modern PLA is much more durable, ABS is quite durable, and Nylon is effectively indestructible. Of course, bonded layers won't be as strong as injection molding, or
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You're 100% right, but what you don't include is that some (if not most) of the parts created by 3D printer can be engineered to be better than the originals, even when you include lower quality materials. And it often doesn't take much.
The parts I'm talking about, were designed as much for the process of building the product it was a part of as anything, and once you get around THAT limitation (process of manufacturing), you'll have a better part engineered in no time.
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why still buy a HDTV when 4K's are becoming the norm
Lack of 4K content - now, and for at least five years until they work out how to deliver it.
What, you _like_ upscaling artefacts onscreen?
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Currently 3D printing my own 3D printer (Score:3)
It's a mobius printer that prints itself.
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RepRap was about self-replicating 3D printers (Score:4, Informative)
Sure, you were joking, but the RepRap Project [wikipedia.org] was about designing 3D printers that can print most of their parts so you can easily make more of them.
Re:Currently 3D printing my own 3D printer (Score:5, Funny)
It's a mobius printer that prints itself.
Hmm... I'm not sure we want to pay for a dimension we're not gonna use.
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It doesn't print a copy of itself. It prints -itself-, meaning, it makes itself progressively bigger.
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How perverse.
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It's a mobius printer that prints itself.
Really - it prints everything needed to make a printer that can print itself?
Or is it like these "robotic" vacuum cleaners, that can merely clean small parts of a household that are just floors, so long as they are all on the same level? - Conveniently forgetting about all the other surfaces (and curtains) such as shelf-tops, stairs, behind the TV cabinet or under the cooker that collect crud, too.
Once someone designs a 3D printer that actually can print all the parts needed, then it might (just) start t
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Really - it prints everything needed to make a printer that can print itself?
Current RepRap still needs some "vitamins", or non-printed materials.
Or is it like these "robotic" vacuum cleaners, that can merely clean small parts of a household that are just floors, so long as they are all on the same level? - Conveniently forgetting about all the other surfaces (and curtains) such as shelf-tops, stairs, behind the TV cabinet or under the cooker that collect crud, too.
I think the idea is that you'd put a Roomba on the floor of one room while doing the tight spots with a handheld vacuum cleaner in another room, to cut person time in half.
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The goal of RepRap is to make manufacturing (with plastic) cheap and universally available. You still need some non-plastic parts, like the hot end, electronics, and stepper motors. But they've got the electronics in 3D printers down to commodity stuff that's relatively cheaply available, so you can make a 3D printer for $200 or so of electronics, plus getting a friend to print a set of the printable parts.
It'll be a while until you can 3D print 100% of the device - it's hard to imagine being able to 3D pri
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so you can make a 3D printer for $200 or so of electronics, plus getting a friend to print a set of the printable parts.
That's a good thing, so long as you live near someone with a 3D printer. Otherwise, it sort of reminds me of homebrew for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable, which is complicated by the fact that a lot of the methods to get homebrew booting relied on the fact that you have to use an already homebrewed console to set a PSP's battery serial number to -1 or install FreeMcBoot on a PS2 8 MB memory card.
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That's a good thing, so long as you live near someone with a 3D printer.
You probably do. Check on http://www.3dhubs.com/ [3dhubs.com] for someone near you who is willing to print for you.
Missing Option (Score:2)
We have one at work that we can use for personal items.
3D printers at TechShop, Shapeways, or Kinkos (Score:2)
3D printing technology is changing much faster than I can come up with things I want to 3D-print, so it doesn't make sense to buy my own. If I want access to printers, there are places like TechShop that have them (hey, Bay Area Privilege is useful if you've got it), and I've heard that FedEx / Kinkos copier shops were also doing a pilot project with them (though it may have been in the Netherlands or Belgium and not the US yet.) Also, for slower turnaround, you can send your printer files to Shapeways an
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My local library system (Arapahoe County, Colorado) has 3D printers in each (or most) of its branch libraries for patron use.
Missing Option (Score:2)
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Re:Missing Option (Score:4, Funny)
Or a 1:20 scale model of the TARDIS
Well, it's bigger on the inside...
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Not quite yet, thank you (Score:3)
Meh. (Score:2)
So far I have been pretty underwhelmed by what I have seen as both the capability, and the lack of creativity in using them. I'd much rather have a CNC mill and lathe at home (someday...), as most plastic crap is just crap. I used to have access to a 3D printer about 15 years ago at work, but it was cool, but the actual utility of it escaped us once the wow factor dissipated. We did a lot more nifty stuff with the machine shop in the lab than the 3D printer.
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'zackly.
3-axis entry level CNC routers are down in the $1k-$3k range now. That's starting to get interesting!
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3d printing seems cool for prototyping and for expensive one-offs, but impractic
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"and the lack of creativity in using them."
I have seen some amazing things done with 3d printers. Don't take away the massive achievements 3d printers have allowed
I build giant robots with my 3d printer. for no other reason that why not.
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Then you haven't been paying much attention wrt creativity. 3D printing is transforming my hobby (building scale models).
The drawback of the traditional machine shop is the long learning curve. I've had a lathe for about 2 years now, and I still feel I've barely scratched the surface of what it can do. This is caused by fear: getting it wrong means potentially wrecking the machine. And lack of time (to go on a metalworking course, for instance).
The same thing has held me back from buying a CNC mill: it'd ta
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Same with 3D printers. Have you seen the list of materials Shapeways can print in?
I'm not arguing a machine shop isn't useful. Just saying there are greater barriers to entry than with 3D printing.
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Got one, works great (Score:2)
The local makerspace had a deal where you'd be there for the day building a Printrbot Metal from the kit with a few people from their staff assisting since the directions that come with it are garbage. When I left I had a fully working and calibrated printer. Since I assembled it myself I know what to look for when there's problems. Hook up a RPi to control it and hook up a webcam and I can send prints from anywhere and watch it run. For Halloween I made a bunch of translucent skulls that I put blinking
Missing option: CNC Router (Score:2)
I will have one of these soon.
It will work on materials other than soft plastics and nylon (e.g., wood, brass, aluminum), so it will be usable for fabricating real parts that can withstand temperatures like southern California car dashboards.
The downside is that the affordable ones are 3 axis, so you can't have overhang in parts. With clever use of zeroing and flipping the part, you can mitigate that somewhat.
I guess if I was willing to cast in metals, a standard 3D printer would be OK. Print in wax, make a
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If your southern California car dashboard is hitting the 200+ Celsius temperatures needed to melt typical printer filament materials, I'd say you probably have worse things to worry about.
But sure, for some things you need material properties that just don't work well with fused filament deposition.
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ABS melts at around 200F, not 200C. But even at 100F you'll find that a lot of plastic structures lose their integrity. And it they're load bearing in any way, they're goners. PLA has a higher melt temperature, and Nylon higher still. You might be able to get away with those.
Still, aluminum! brass! wood! soap! er ... wax! ... er ... well, I dunno. I just like the idea of a diversity of material to work with. If I had more cash, I'd have both a 3D printer *and* a CNC router. And if I had even more? A full on
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I think you got PLA and ABS backwards. PLA as a wide range of "glass transition" that starts to turn soft at 60c but melts around 160 c, ABS has a much narrower glass transition range (and the same melting temp) so it can take much higher temperatures without getting soft. Nylon can take higher temperatures, and Polycarbonate even higher.
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I think you got PLA and ABS backwards.
Could well be. I often get lost in the TLA soup, especially when I'm trying to justify spending money on a new toy.
It all comes down to me being excited by the new developments in the low-end CNC world :)
Rent one or sebd files to others to print for you? (Score:2)
I assume this is possible, anyone know?
I'd love to fiddle with one - I don't really have the space or the money to buy one, but I'd love to play with one for a bit.
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Your local makerspace would be a place to look for one to play with. If you just want to send a file to a neighbor and have him print it for you, http://www.3dhubs.com/ [3dhubs.com] is a site where you can hook up with local printer owners who offer this service.
subtractive technology (Score:3, Interesting)
I made my own old school cnc router - subtractive technology.
We've got to stop using plastics based on petrochemicals.
I work with plantation grown wood, natural, renewable, recyclable, beautiful.
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The PLA (polylactic acid) filament used in many printers is actually made from cornstarch, not petrochemicals. It prints at a slightly lower temperature and doesn't need a heated bed the way ABS* does.
Of course you could probably make a case about the amount of petrochemicals (fuel, fertilizer, pesticide) typically used in growing the corn in the first place.
*And some of the more exotic (for now) filaments like polycarbonate or nylon, which require even higher temperatures.
Probably won't own anytime soon. (Score:2)
I probably won't own a 3d printer anytime soon; but that doesn't mean never. Let's face it. Sometimes subtractive techniques are better. Something like a 3-d printed rifle is mostly a "because we can" exercise. The best parts for something like that will probably always be milled. I hedged my answer with "probably" because I can see using 3-d printing techniques for non-critical trim parts on some hobby item or household good I might want. 3-d printed window curtain slider...sure, why not? The reason
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For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
That should be "intents and purposes" not "intensive proposes". To answer the question, those that care are the ones to whom proper English is important.
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"Intensive purposes" [grammarist.com] is a malapropism [wikipedia.org] caused by miss-hearing something and then repeating what was thought to be heard. There are many examples in music such as "Slow walking Walter. Fire engine guy" which is actually "Smoke on the water, Fire in the sky". Try to justify it any way you want but it is still an example of incorrect usage. Much like using 'who' where 'whom' is the correct word.
Even your justification falls far short as "purposes" and "properties" are very different things therefore "Intensive
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Even your justification falls far short as "purposes" and "properties" are very different things therefore "Intensive purposes" have nothing at all to do with "intensive properties".
Does this mean puns on "intensive" that allude to the malapropism are necessarily inappropriate?
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I think that the point of the 3d-printed rifle, or of the regulated part of the rifle, is that at some point any moron will be able to download someone else's 3d CAD file of said rifle part and hit print, and will end up with that otherwise-regulated rifle part, to which assembling the remainder of the rifle is all done with unregulated replacement/repair parts wit
Someday? (Score:2)
LaserJet 3D (Score:2)
I used to have an HP LaserJet IIID; that thing was built like a tank!
any of them (Score:3)
I'm pretty sure that every printer I've ever owned was three-dimensional.
Peachy Printer (Score:2)
Still waiting for it to being delivered! :/
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I didn't get one (the office got a 3D printer the same time the kickstarter went up), but it sounds really interesting. I'm interested to see what the prints actually look like in the wild.
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For your service : latest prints (from 1 week ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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While that does look nice, I'm really interested in what happens when the non-creator gets a hold of it and people start printing crazy stuff.
I have three 3D Printers (Score:2)
I have a Makerbot Replicator 2, a Flash Forge Creator X, and a Rostock Max Kit (under construction)
They're fun to use and I've learned a bit of 3D Modeling, to boot.
Solution looking for a problem? (Score:2)
I'm intrigued at the possibilities, but haven't come up with a compelling reason to buy one.
Yet... :-)
...laura
fun, but... (Score:2)
I've got a 1st gen printrbot.
it's fun, and you can make cute little (single colored) doodads; but that's about all it is.
I've made a few battery holders, which are a step up from what I usually did to carry spare AA and AAA batteries (wrap them in duct tape)
not a 'must have' device, by any means, but if you've got money burning a hole in your pocket, it's a fun toy.
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Until I can use it to print appropriately rubbery silicone materials...
You could print the molds and then pour in your silicone.
I mean, I guess. Why would I know that?
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The moulds would be automatically ribbed since you can't make a smooth surface with glorified hot glue guns.
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There are simple chemical methods of smoothing the surface.
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Reference?
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I found the use of acetone to basically melt a layer and allow gravity to flow it smooth. Here are a few problems.
Acetone it volatile nasty stuff.
It does not work well on the horizontal surfaces.
It must be watched or you lose detail.
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Acetone isn't really *that* nasty. It certainly beats acids, or substances that create strongly poisonous fumes. You'd have to try hard to get anything more serious than a migraine from acetone fumes poisoning, and while it's certainly not good for your skin, washing your hands after finishing the work is good enough - no need to panic if a drop lands on your skin. Sure you should keep the container tightly closed and you need to watch out with fire, but it's really hardly worse than gasoline when you work
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It's surface tension that should do the work.
If it is surface tension then horizontal surfaces should smooth out as well but they do not. Another problem is that thin areas will distort as the plastic is softened. Sure acetone smoothing is acceptable for larger solid items but that still greatly restricts what can be made.
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Until I can use it to print appropriately rubbery silicone materials...
I was thinking more of printing a Cherry 2000: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C... [wikipedia.org]
This is definitely Slashdot "Nudes for nerds, Shit that splatters". In the end the anti-hero decides for the real woman, and not the "perfect" woman robot.
If you are a real geek, watch this film together with your girlfriend over the holidays.
Oh, I think there might be a contradiction in the last sentence . . .
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"PC" was Paper Cassette, from when HP printers had only two-character displays for codes.
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Luckily those of us that are merely aware of Office Space and don't abjectly worship it get to laugh at the intentional misquote that has meaning to people that haven't ever seen the fucking film because lets face it, PC Load Letter was only in Office Space because every poor shit that's ever worked in an office in the 90s saw it at least once. Usually once a day, or more.
Subverting it into the 3D printer era isn't even a new joke, but clearly it's passed you by nonetheless. Don't worry, someone will buy yo
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It's still a maturing industry, like 2D printing back when those printers were hundreds to thousands of dollars. But it's rapidly transitioning to a consumer-friendly technology. Every generation is better than the previous one, and the rate of advance is impressive. For example, the auto-leveling printers eliminate the primary cause of print failures. And the software is better and easier every year. Of course, it requires training and skill to design 3d objects, but that's true of good 2d products as well