FRAMING JOHN DELOREAN - ON VOD
www.framingjohndeloreanfilm.com
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Thank you so much for sharing this!
So far I am 2-for-13 with my 3D printer, in terms of getting things successfully printed. But I am learning!
For this heatsink thing: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2184834
...it doesn't print because it tries to put some material in mid-air when it gets to that second flange from the bottom. But I think if the two pieces could be split up and rotated 90 degrees, it would work. (Maybe it would be tipsy from being tall and thin but I don't know).
I am looking for a free, entry-level program to try to edit these things but haven't found one yet. TinkerCAD doesn't seem to allow you to "cut", and it looks like Fusion360 is a paid product, which I'm not quite ready for that level of commitment yet, given my batting average with the printer.
Anyways I'll keep trying stuff, it's been fun so far!
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by
mike123
For this heatsink thing:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2184834
...it doesn't print because it tries to put some material in mid-air when it gets to that second flange from the bottom. But I think if the two pieces could be split up and rotated 90 degrees, it would work. (Maybe it would be tipsy from being tall and thin but I don't know).
Yes you would need to rotate that 90 degrees or add a lot of supports.
Your slicer should allow you to rotate the model.
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Originally Posted by
Bitsyncmaster
Your slicer should allow you to rotate the model.
Oh, I did not know that but you're right!
I was also able to add a little rectangle of material on the TinkerCAD website, so that when I rotated it, it would have 100% of the footprint flat on the printer bed. The result is here:
https://www.tinkercad.com/things/3C7...old-heat-sinks
Hope it is helpful to some people! I am 10 hours into the print (15 or so to go) but fingers-crossed it does look like it will work.
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by
mike123
Oh, I did not know that but you're right!
I was also able to add a little rectangle of material on the TinkerCAD website, so that when I rotated it, it would have 100% of the footprint flat on the printer bed. The result is here:
https://www.tinkercad.com/things/3C7...old-heat-sinks
Hope it is helpful to some people! I am 10 hours into the print (15 or so to go) but fingers-crossed it does look like it will work.
What I do with my resin printer is add a printed platform that sits on closely spaced standoffs so that it can easily pop off the built plate. Building with a large flat surface on the build plate is very hard to remove. I do have a filament printer but am spoiled with the quality I get with resin printing.
I then cut or sand off that built plate.
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Oh interesting, I haven't even heard of resin printing, maybe something to look into once I have a better handle on the 3D Filament stuff.
The heat sink print came out perfect, took a bit less than 24 hours. I was surprised at how tall it is, but I've never seen any of this stuff in person anywhere else.
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I have begun printing some flux capacitor pieces that are linked in the description of this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwaCr0_KH5M
So far, they are coming out very nicely! The Torr relay base and top just snap together, I didn't realize how precise these models and printers can be. My first flux capacitor used some sliced wooden dowels for this part.
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