Make some rainbow ones so as not to offend the calveswell i want these to come apart.
these things are shockingly nasty.
@jblnut should know what these are...
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So, what is it? Some kind of nose ring?Make some rainbow ones so as not to offend the calvesWe always used those stupid green ones with the bolt that’d rust up in 2 days. Major PITA. How easy do these come apart ?
I was thinking of asking how smooth they are as they look a little rough but the green and orange rings we’d use weren’t that smooth by any means and it never caused issues. The varying sizes is really nice !!
Make some rainbow ones so as not to offend the calvesWe always used those stupid green ones with the bolt that’d rust up in 2 days. Major PITA. How easy do these come apart ?
I was thinking of asking how smooth they are as they look a little rough but the green and orange rings we’d use weren’t that smooth by any means and it never caused issues. The varying sizes is really nice !!





So, what is it? Some kind of nose ring?
I am familiar with the style shown in the above pic in the middle. Does your 3D printed version go thru a hole pierced in the nose?calf weaning ring. when they're still trying to find anything that looks like a ****** these nose rings poke the recipient of the calf trying to **** and it causes a break up to occur.
I am familiar with the style shown in the above pic in the middle. Does your 3D printed version go thru a hole pierced in the nose?
That would be my assumption... that cooking kills any bacteria that finds its way from the 3d printed cookie cutter to the dough during the cutting process.so whats the deal here then? i guess cause you gotta cook them it mitigates?
Finish looking good though!
I'm sure they make one, but the price point is probably astronomical.
3d printing looks really interesting, but also intimidating. I have looked locally for a beginner class to learn this , but not very successful. Does anyone have any tips or recommendations on some good places to learn?
Dave
3d printing looks really interesting, but also intimidating. I have looked locally for a beginner class to learn this , but not very successful. Does anyone have any tips or recommendations on some good places to learn?
Dave
I'm sure they make one, but the price point is probably astronomical.
That takes all the fun out of it. I've only printed a couple things that weren't my own. There's just too much enjoyment in the struggle to get the thing in my brain onto the printer bed. And the pleasure of seeing my totally ridiculous idea come to life is incomparable.With the increasingly large amount of files available on printables.com, thingiverse, and Bambu's Makerworld, the amount of stuff that is out there and can be printed without any CAD ability is growing rapidly.
That takes all the fun out of it. I've only printed a couple things that weren't my own. There's just too much enjoyment in the struggle to get the thing in my brain onto the printer bed. And the pleasure of seeing my totally ridiculous idea come to life is incomparable.
141 lol. I need to get further south than you are. Like out of the state.school of youtube trained me. where you at in NJ? exit 4/5 here
141 lol. I need to get further south than you are. Like out of the state.
see above. looks a bit big for that calf but i dont have a reference.I am familiar with the style shown in the above pic in the middle. Does your 3D printed version go thru a hole pierced in the nose?
print in place still just hurts my brain.


I'm still holding out for a large-capacity Bambu. They have to know the demand for it is there...
I'm wondering if using the support material between the individual parts would allow this. Basically using it as a barrier to make it easy to get them apart after. It's something I have been thinking of when printing multiple similar parts that are low profile. Would be great to just stack them and let the printer run overnight printing parts.anyone stacked print objects?
one unit:
40 units:
I'm wondering if using the support material between the individual parts would allow this. Basically using it as a barrier to make it easy to get them apart after. It's something I have been thinking of when printing multiple similar parts that are low profile. Would be great to just stack them and let the printer run overnight printing parts.
The thing with objects like the Multiboard in particular where it has very small contact areas with the build plate, is that they are prone to warping. Any warping will ruin your entire stack. Stacking objects with lots of contact to build plate wouldn't worry me as muchim going same material. using this concept: .2mm gap between parts. iron top layer. should allow for breaking them apart.
The thing with objects like the Multiboard in particular where it has very small contact areas with the build plate, is that they are prone to warping. Any warping will ruin your entire stack. Stacking objects with lots of contact to build plate wouldn't worry me as much
I don't think the demand is what is stopping them.I'm still holding out for a large-capacity Bambu. They have to know the demand for it is there...