View allAll Photos Tagged 3Dprinter
so far so good, mostly free of defects
This is a mini mug: "Traditionally this is a small mug to allow you to toast your successful build of the RapMan 3"
Students working on a summer project to take a desktop 3D printer, and move it into a portable briefcase.
Images from the Summit for Transformative Learning conference at Mary Institute and Saint Louis Country Day School (MICDS) in St. Louis, Missouri from June 7-9, 2015. Pictures are of some of the workshops personally attended, and school spaces visited.
The Object Connex500 printed this functional mechancal sample. Knobs turn and gears rotate!
Scenes from the nerve center of the 72-hour Red Bull Creation challenge at the TechShop Annex in San Francisco.
September 30 - October 1, 2017
Bryan Czibesz, Assistant Professor of Ceramics at SUNY New Paltz, will led a hands-on workshop and “build-out” on Ceramic 3D Printing for Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and MIT students at the Ceramics Program. A 3D printer will be constructed during his visit that can be accessed by students after the workshop for research purposes. Czibesz is an artist grounded in the tradition of object making who asks questions of authorship and authenticity through varying degrees of engagement and dislocation between the hand and material manipulation.
For a commercial unit, it's extremely ugly. We couldn't figure out what was under the bed, but it looked like carpeting. The wooden platform looks like it was assembled out of laser cut bits and then dipped in black paint.
To be fair, it looks "unfinished" as in, it's bare metal and lacking the fit and finish you've come to expect in a commercial product.
And no, the parts you see behind it were not printed on it... There was a Thing-O-Matic on the other side of the table.
This "Aroma" hot plate worked well enough, but the temps aren't very even. On ours, "low" was about 365° F, which is perfect for the Zeph solder. If possible, I'd put an aluminum plate over this hot plate for this kind of work.
It printed near perfect until about 90% mark and then came unstuck from the ABP and extruder knocked it loose. Still works fine, just didn't print the lip so I'm using it on top instead of the rear back location but I think this works better anyways for feeding the filament in.
Yes, it kinda looks like a Super Mario pipe...