To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

The Everything 3D Printer Thread

ArcReactorKC

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2019
Messages
2,237
Location
Out in the county NE of KCMO
You are pretty trusting.

My slicer underestimates the time it will take to print by anywhere from 20 minutes on a tiny object to several hours on a large job. I can only imagine how inaccurate the material length would be. Pull out the electronic balance and find out I guess.

In your slicer find the acceleration and jerk settings. Match these to what you actually have in the printer and you'll find it to be much more accurate.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

txvwnut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
7,588
Location
Bedford, Texas
I’ve been on a small organizational printing binge lately. Did some holders for spotting drills, round over end mills, hardware for my line boring bars and bobbins for the sewing machine.
 

Attachments

  • 7567DD94-EBB8-4309-8E36-F635F7BA300A.jpg
    7567DD94-EBB8-4309-8E36-F635F7BA300A.jpg
    156 KB · Views: 181
  • CFF66A79-684D-4FBE-9D61-3FAF2607C538.jpg
    CFF66A79-684D-4FBE-9D61-3FAF2607C538.jpg
    150.9 KB · Views: 177
  • 1FFC585B-56D5-450C-A2EE-D139DA2E8F3E.jpg
    1FFC585B-56D5-450C-A2EE-D139DA2E8F3E.jpg
    154.3 KB · Views: 147
  • 10E9FC0F-07B5-4185-8671-E01F30536BB1.jpg
    10E9FC0F-07B5-4185-8671-E01F30536BB1.jpg
    153.4 KB · Views: 150

white91formula

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2012
Messages
424
Location
Boston, MA
Made a bracket for my snowmobile. Been getting alot of z banding lately. Need to track that down.
 

Attachments

  • Attach0_20210104_165757.jpg
    Attach0_20210104_165757.jpg
    85.5 KB · Views: 176

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,542
Location
Iowa
I feel like I'm always saying this to someone but if you need glue, or hairspray, or another adhesion promoter there is something wrong..

Now that I think about it, I don't think I've ever actually tried printing without glue on the bed... ...I'll have to give it a shot on the next print and see what happens.

So a follow up to this... I printed a vac adapter for my bench top jointer over the weekend and didn't put down any glue - no issues with the print at all. I did use a brim because of the small contact patch with the bed. Thanks again for pointing this out.

View media item 109454
 

loganb

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 29, 2011
Messages
5,494
Location
Omaha, NE
So a follow up to this... I printed a vac adapter for my bench top jointer over the weekend and didn't put down any glue - no issues with the print at all. I did use a brim because of the small contact patch with the bed. Thanks again for pointing this out.

Nicely done! A couple dedicated hose adapters for power tools is on my list of shop related stuff to print as well
 

Gerald O

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 5, 2013
Messages
1,884
Location
NC
Cool idea about the vac adapter! I might have to steal that to make a few for my shop.
 

logan_gibson

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2015
Messages
65
After somehow turning the printer off in my sleep the day before. I finally got this screwdriver rack printed out last night.
Slowly trying to organize the workbench a bit, and move some more used tools out of my toolbox and onto the wall.

IMG_7009.jpg
 

penright

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 27, 2016
Messages
618
Location
SW of Mustang, OK
After somehow turning the printer off in my sleep the day before. I finally got this screwdriver rack printed out last night.
Slowly trying to organize the workbench a bit, and move some more used tools out of my toolbox and onto the wall.

attachment.php


You know sometimes an idea is so simple, but you just don't see it.
I am talking about how you stack the tools off of the board. As long as leverage is not an issue, using space in front of the pegboard leaves room on the pegboard. Here is a picture from Fusion 360 where I did my nut drivers. If I stack them the way you did, I can get the 6 of them in the space of 3.
Thanks. :)
Now back to the drawing board, or better said, back to Fusion 360. :)


HfaOsXO77SpV8-rZmLu_rTfCbuF0L_XOZQa2WFKFz6pa7Vr33lQ_tILEZ6PuZYeVrDg9dH-QFb38NZgYi6T1R7LIN5rVWeMw-i2qLlx77YZXe3sj0AUB-gZBWx5WcdNZiSJdCBnevrrX4uHOAGBrgfaAfvNqetlsZQjJ9AzAtNeFzugT42FmW1P45hTfm_4tWrMvfkNCN2n8TlytketH7lRxM1jhrdzOE1W1eV869sWpArVZx7_NGucoqXsuog_XcXUe3ecLqXckHyhhT-YpQybMP91S5eJ2CxzHoflXsTKsHrpTDpnuZOZPmLxl5DryOLuzHP2IUIBLlpQiXPQ92mCWV5BKZMvP1x1akU4peq84t6gAcFpqjlroNk_Hjezz9ge9pcfgZUmF4wCCNrURRN9rb6sreIUd7bnJauK-yEARmiOt11ekx9E3ZQkVY4xtfzF531mDj-cQ7_r6QoAQZ8m6QlgnQGOMIJKL60Bb7n3GRkVaTEWT01Hb_xF26ELDMw4MDCggeFnKAyzfQM6WPZMyUhJ--Gb9MKEGdOUAQLr9uCWyvPHyAUBJZyNvXYsap76Ferr2MgUOTnCACVANdfZ9VTKh12sLH59Cw2OvkXZJmXTGk-VLCc5r_jNZowJxkhjziSL19P6mTbhT4qksfLVvzMmjnuYIqsSDrBAXS7onM6kOWgR4_6IDG8foLw=w427-h431-no
 

logan_gibson

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2015
Messages
65
You know sometimes an idea is so simple, but you just don't see it.
I am talking about how you stack the tools off of the board. As long as leverage is not an issue, using space in front of the pegboard leaves room on the pegboard. Here is a picture from Fusion 360 where I did my nut drivers. If I stack them the way you did, I can get the 6 of them in the space of 3.
Thanks. :)
Now back to the drawing board, or better said, back to Fusion 360. :)

I can't take credit for the design, I just found it on thingverse. But yes most of the time you can get away with a little more leverage as long as you print the pegs at a higher in-fill(I do all of mine at 70+)
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3230616

This one would work for the nut drivers, you just need to modify the through holes to be the right size for the drivers.
Personally I would modify the indentions for the drivers as well to match their size.
A friend gifted me a set of Wiha's for helping him thorough the year on his car, so I don't have the dimensions and just printed it as-is. So the drivers do wobble a bit when just dropping them into the holder.
 

penright

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 27, 2016
Messages
618
Location
SW of Mustang, OK
I can't take credit for the design, I just found it on thingverse. But yes most of the time you can get away with a little more leverage as long as you print the pegs at a higher in-fill(I do all of mine at 70+)
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3230616

This one would work for the nut drivers, you just need to modify the through holes to be the right size for the drivers.
Personally I would modify the indentions for the drivers as well to match their size.
A friend gifted me a set of Wiha's for helping him thorough the year on his car, so I don't have the dimensions and just printed it as-is. So the drivers do wobble a bit when just dropping them into the holder.

Well, you found it, you posted it, and so I am giving you credit. :)

I made a try 2 at it inspired by your stacked design.
I can't test the print till Monday. Too much going on this weekend. Hopefully will finish punching the vent for the shop heater through the roof. :)
Here is the before (straight across) and after (stacked).

ACtC-3fu1Prayl0JbTShIARt-kgbrcDRyR28XSJoENIzFl0V0aNqi3Uc6VKs3phgDxHnDFnFKitM_Tp2m4kN98WQK6VP-zvflSdbutE1csabU5CC0gMpWQGZrHYw-7jeM3vi9uu3jmLiQmD_OMwPnNx06OtvHg=w1518-h821-no


ACtC-3cIPZxPpKmKutwvQ4p0QPrLZ_vHw6zlKtpQnxKSlyZV-L1_v-5X3jCNew-jiFQCK7sOOt8iqvvdKDepzh_X_IjqRcQPlVaM9FYhwN8N3w0LqCEkjJhryDS2Fy6Mt6KTaAEv5quvy8sDfe7bLeB-Oj-Rfg=w1518-h821-no
 

vavet

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 6, 2012
Messages
5,318
Location
Ashland, VA
We have a 3d printer and a universal test machine at work. I worked with some of the other engineers to develop these 3d prints to hold some of the parts for the UTM to tidy up the storage area and protect the parts better.
 

Attachments

  • B3AECB3B-6F8B-4737-9F28-1D039D686146.jpg
    B3AECB3B-6F8B-4737-9F28-1D039D686146.jpg
    102.2 KB · Views: 155
  • 69E5C6A7-C758-401D-B66A-994C992A9AF0.jpg
    69E5C6A7-C758-401D-B66A-994C992A9AF0.jpg
    146.2 KB · Views: 152
  • C9FB437C-CBFD-491A-8151-3283169D1382.jpg
    C9FB437C-CBFD-491A-8151-3283169D1382.jpg
    86.9 KB · Views: 142

brawls43

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2012
Messages
133
Location
Minneapolis
Finally figured out why I was struggling with some underextrusion issues suddenly on my Ender 3. Went from printing great to suddenly horrible. Chased all kinds of stuff before I noticed the cracked arm on the tensioner for the extruder. Time to upgrade to metal.
 

Attachments

  • PXL_20210110_030433263.MP.jpg
    PXL_20210110_030433263.MP.jpg
    58.4 KB · Views: 122
  • PXL_20210110_030143448.MP.jpg
    PXL_20210110_030143448.MP.jpg
    93.9 KB · Views: 114

penright

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 27, 2016
Messages
618
Location
SW of Mustang, OK
I bought a bunch of C channel from metal scrap. It has a great power coat. In fact the powder coat is so good, to weld it, you have to use a grinder to clean paint to weld. So I took a piece down to the box store and had them match the paint so Ii can touch up the weld and not have to paint the whole thing. I used some of the C channels to mount these bins. I printed these caps and painted them. I look to buy some but could not find any that I liked, so 3D printer to the rescue. :)

The before is on the right and the caps are on the left.

ACtC-3ePgYeqaoQwhRclhDU1_2gEcHtq7TwcQpEmiTD0Lr-J5jAQnKaSiXhjMiqcgL-W6-CSR8B36roMyqvD99QqFc90hIKTqJehinFe5lSFod5PpWfsVbIyJ5zpUpIsFe7SFo8FFNJsOZsjnHjmATt5rmHh1g=w834-h625-no
 

bobs_garage

Member
Joined
Mar 13, 2015
Messages
14
There are some really interesting projects in this thread. Quick question from someone who hasn't purchased one yet.

I'm curious what the expenses are for printing, for example the screwdriver holder? I recognize that it's a hobby and the price is secondary (as my wife can attest)

thx
 

penright

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 27, 2016
Messages
618
Location
SW of Mustang, OK
There are some really interesting projects in this thread. Quick question from someone who hasn't purchased one yet.

I'm curious what the expenses are for printing, for example the screwdriver holder? I recognize that it's a hobby and the price is secondary (as my wife can attest)

thx

Not sure how accurate the Cura slicer calculations are, but the nut driver I did shows about .50 cents. I have the spool price set at $20 per 1KG spool.

That does not count the ones that I threw away in the design process. :lol_hitti
 

bobs_garage

Member
Joined
Mar 13, 2015
Messages
14
Not sure how accurate the Cura slicer calculations are, but the nut driver I did shows about .50 cents. I have the spool price set at $20 per 1KG spool.

That does not count the ones that I threw away in the design process. :lol_hitti

Thanks, that's pretty impressive.
 

vavet

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 6, 2012
Messages
5,318
Location
Ashland, VA
There are some really interesting projects in this thread. Quick question from someone who hasn't purchased one yet.

I'm curious what the expenses are for printing, for example the screwdriver holder? I recognize that it's a hobby and the price is secondary (as my wife can attest)

thx

The filament is pretty inexpensive and goes a long way. The pictures of the pieces in post 812 used a little over half a roll of filament. Maybe it’s $12 worth of PLA. Other types of filament get a bit more expensive for a spool or the spools are smaller, but PLA works pretty well.
Here is my latest creation for home. I 3d printed the battery holders so they engage the battery mounting slots just like a tool would. I added the 3d printed sign at the upper right.
 

Attachments

  • 60D29107-A403-4318-8478-F58C4C81F86D.jpg
    60D29107-A403-4318-8478-F58C4C81F86D.jpg
    149.4 KB · Views: 114
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,542
Location
Iowa
There are some really interesting projects in this thread. Quick question from someone who hasn't purchased one yet.

I'm curious what the expenses are for printing, for example the screwdriver holder? I recognize that it's a hobby and the price is secondary (as my wife can attest)

thx

I compare it to trying to justify buying a motorcycle to save on fuel costs. Sure, you might save some money during your commute, but the weekend joyrides are going to cancel out most of that savings. With a 3D printer, you can save on buying certain things, but you're also going to be printing off a whole bunch of other things you might not necessarly need.

The vac adapter (a few posts back in the thread) I printed for my jointer cost around $0.80 in material (adapter and the support material). It took me maybe 15 minutes to draw and slice, and just shy of 4 hours to print. I could have probably bought one for $5, but it would have taken about the same time to track it down online and a few more days to arrive. That is the main reason I like having a 3D printer - I can get my hands on something much more quickly than I could through other methods.
 

Darby9

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2020
Messages
110
Location
San Francisco
I'm curious what the expenses are for printing, for example the screwdriver holder? I recognize that it's a hobby and the price is secondary (as my wife can attest)

thx

This little holder I made for my garage door opener is 25-35 gr. of plastic, depending on infill settings. At 31 gr with ABS, it'd be about $1. With PLA and loose infill, closer to 50 cents.

Maintenance cost is minimal if you don't print exotic materials. If your printer needs ABS slurry or glue for adhesion, that adds a few cents per part.

The rabbit hole of costs (which every hobby needs, right?) is buying a zillion different cool filaments and modifying your printer. If you buy a decent machine up front and are making utilitarian parts out of one or two colors, the amortized costs are pretty low.

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0161.jpg
    IMG_0161.jpg
    91.6 KB · Views: 115
  • garage opener.jpg
    garage opener.jpg
    17.3 KB · Views: 725

banjopete

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2014
Messages
300
Location
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Always fun with this stuff and neat to see what everyone's printing.

I needed a dust boot for my cnc router as I'm setting up my second one now and know the mess mdf can make without some dust control.

Two pieces, in case I want to tweak the base but this is v1.0. It came out pretty well but my petg was extra stringy on this one after being better on past prints. Might be time for the safe clean prints of pla once again.20210113_075630.jpg20210113_162201.jpeg

Sent from my SM-G960W using The Garage Journal mobile app
 

slim01

Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2010
Messages
23
Recently finished some speaker pods for my Can Am, as a concept I'm pretty happy with the result so far. They handled a roll-over in the dunes really well with no damage and the speakers sound pretty good for cheap 2 way JVCs.

Below are the rears. Designed in Fusion 360, sliced with Slic3r, printed in PLA+, 0.16 layer height on an Artillery Sidewinder X1. Brass threaded inserts were used for the bolts to screw into.

attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • 20201224_134559.jpg
    20201224_134559.jpg
    149.5 KB · Views: 671
  • 20201224_134538.jpg
    20201224_134538.jpg
    148.3 KB · Views: 658
  • 20201224_134516.jpg
    20201224_134516.jpg
    153.9 KB · Views: 663
  • 20201224_134511.jpg
    20201224_134511.jpg
    147.1 KB · Views: 666
  • 20201224_134453.jpg
    20201224_134453.jpg
    148.1 KB · Views: 664
  • 20201224_134445.jpg
    20201224_134445.jpg
    154.3 KB · Views: 663
  • Rear speaker pod.jpg
    Rear speaker pod.jpg
    54.6 KB · Views: 672

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,542
Location
Iowa
I'm in trouble fellas... Wife found Thingiverse and now I've got a laundry list of things to print for her. First thing on the list was a tool organizer for her Cricut. She also figured out that I can make all sorts of shapes and cutters to help her with her clay and concrete jewelry making. I'd better get another spool of filament on order.

View media item 109796
View media item 109795
 

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,542
Location
Iowa
If she bumps the volume of printing high enough, maybe you can justify another printer!

If she does find it useful beyond this initial batch of items, I'll get her setup with Cura and show her how to slice and run the printer herself. She's interested but a little intimidated by Fusion360. I have no doubt she would pick it up pretty quickly if we worked through a couple of builds together.

Or maybe she will want him to print something that requires them to get a bigger printer. :)

I'm running a CR-10 S4. While I've never come close to using the full print volume (nearly 16" cube) it is nice not having to worry about how big an item is.
 

Monza Harry

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2018
Messages
1,433
Location
Windsor ON
If she bumps the volume of printing high enough, maybe you can justify another printer!

Or maybe she will want him to print something that requires them to get a bigger printer. :)

If she does find it useful beyond this initial batch of items, I'll get her setup with Cura and show her how to slice and run the printer herself. She's interested but a little intimidated by Fusion360. I have no doubt she would pick it up pretty quickly if we worked through a couple of builds together.

ARE YOU CRAZY? I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy...well maybe my worst?

I'm running a CR-10 S4. While I've never come close to using the full print volume (nearly 16" cube) it is nice not having to worry about how big an item is.

I agree with Brawls and Penright this is a win for the Shop/Garage for sure, letting parts run while you get Carte Blanche for the tools purchases. :drool: :thumbup:Harry
 

toolin' around

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2014
Messages
337
Location
Los Angeles, CA
I'm in trouble fellas... Wife found Thingiverse and now I've got a laundry list of things to print for her. First thing on the list was a tool organizer for her Cricut. She also figured out that I can make all sorts of shapes and cutters to help her with her clay and concrete jewelry making. I'd better get another spool of filament on order.


I’m kinda worried about the “concrete jewelry”... sounds like your wife is not someone you say “no” to!!!
 

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,542
Location
Iowa
I’m kinda worried about the “concrete jewelry”... sounds like your wife is not someone you say “no” to!!!

I do watch my words when she's wearing a necklace that could be used as makeshift jack sap.

Joking aside, I did raise an eyebrow when she asked me to pick up a bag of Quikrete. I actually got her a bucket of quick set repair mix once she told me what she wanted to do. Do a search and look at some pics, it's pretty cool what people are making.
 

shortykorte

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 1, 2014
Messages
8,034
Location
Tallahassee, Fl
That’s great that you’re expanding the use of the printer to whole house. I’ll be checking out the Cricut organizer.

Good suggestion on her learning Cura and how to print. Might look at TinkerCad. Uses basic shapes so might be easier to learn.

Shorty
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
 

toolin' around

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2014
Messages
337
Location
Los Angeles, CA
I do watch my words when she's wearing a necklace that could be used as makeshift jack sap.



Joking aside, I did raise an eyebrow when she asked me to pick up a bag of Quikrete. I actually got her a bucket of quick set repair mix once she told me what she wanted to do. Do a search and look at some pics, it's pretty cool what people are making.



I just checked out the concrete jewelry, and I had no idea!!! Pretty cool.
 

Firebrick43

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2015
Messages
13,971
Location
West central Indiana
I compare it to trying to justify buying a motorcycle to save on fuel costs. Sure, you might save some money during your commute, but the weekend joyrides are going to cancel out most of that savings. With a 3D printer, you can save on buying certain things, but you're also going to be printing off a whole bunch of other things you might not necessarly need.

The vac adapter (a few posts back in the thread) I printed for my jointer cost around $0.80 in material (adapter and the support material). It took me maybe 15 minutes to draw and slice, and just shy of 4 hours to print. I could have probably bought one for $5, but it would have taken about the same time to track it down online and a few more days to arrive. That is the main reason I like having a 3D printer - I can get my hands on something much more quickly than I could through other methods.

Yea but the 3d printer also gives you access to something that does not exist and you can’t buy. Since you used a vac adapter as an example here is an adapter for my desalt track saw that not only changes it to the right diameter but turns it 180 degrees. Dragging the hose sometime catches on things and comes unhooked. Pushing the hose I never have this issue.

View media item 107002
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom