View allAll Photos Tagged replicator
ENGLISH
Casing for MakerBot Replicator 1 3d printer.
Keeps you 3d prints in a controlled temperature environment.
As a kit.
Easily assembled in 10min.
Make your own?
Download the files from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Get one made?
www.creativetools.se/casing-for-makerbot-replicator-1-3d-...
SVENSKA
Huv för MakerBoot Replicator 1 3d-skrivare.
Håller dina 3d utskrifter i
en kontrollerad varm miljö.
Leveras som en byggsats som enkeklt kan monteras på 10 minuter.
Gör en själv?
Ladda hem filerna från: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Skaffa en färdig?
www.creativetools.se/plexiglashuv-for-makerbot-replicator...
South African Topless Zulu Lady with Ethnic Beads Exposing Her Lovely Breasts at Shakaland Village Shaka Zulu Kraal Cultural Replication of a Zulu “Umuzi” or Homestead Normanhurst Farm Nkwalini Kwazulu-Natal South Africa May 1998
ENGLISH
Casing for MakerBot Replicator 1 3d printer.
Keeps you 3d prints in a controlled temperature environment.
As a kit.
Easily assembled in 10min.
Make your own?
Download the files from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Get one made?
www.creativetools.se/casing-for-makerbot-replicator-1-3d-...
SVENSKA
Huv för MakerBoot Replicator 1 3d-skrivare.
Håller dina 3d utskrifter i
en kontrollerad varm miljö.
Leveras som en byggsats som enkeklt kan monteras på 10 minuter.
Gör en själv?
Ladda hem filerna från: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Skaffa en färdig?
www.creativetools.se/plexiglashuv-for-makerbot-replicator...
A 3D-printed bottle made of PLA plastic filament. The print height is 150 mm (6 inches) which is the maximum build sizes in Z-axis for a MakerBot Replicator 2 desktop 3D printer.
The 3D-print settings where as follows:
- Layer height: 0.2 mm
- Perimeters/shells: 2
- Infill: 15%
- Print speed: 90 mm/s
Download the bottles 3D file from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:65922
The 3D printer: bit.ly/1nKeAom
From: creative-tools.com
This small device traps dust in a small sponge before it enters the extruder. In some cases it can also be used to easily lubricate the filament just before it is extruded.
The adapter is designed to fit the Replicator (1) and Replicator 2 extruders.
Protecting your 3D printer's extruder from foreign particles is an important part of keeping the machine maintenance-free. This adapter makes it easy to keep the filament clean.
1 - Download the STL file
2 - 3D print it as is with standard medium or fine settings
3 - Cut two small pieces of sponge and place them into the filter case
4 - Close the case with the lid and two standard 3 mm screws
5 - Unload the filament from your Replicator 1 or 2
6 - Remove the filament guide tube
7 - Insert the loose end of the filament into the adapter.
8 - Make sure that it passes through the sponge and slides smoothly
9 - Insert the adapter into the Replicator's extruder hole
10 - Insert the filament guide tube into the top part of the adapter
11 - Enjoy hours and hours of dust-free 3D print extrusion
Check this Youtube video for more information:
Every now and then open the adapter and check the sponge for dust. Replace if necessary.
In some cases filament can jam or cause uneven 3D prints if the friction in the extruder's filament tube is too high. This adapter can also be used to lubricate the filament just before it enters the extruder.
creativetools.se/makerbot-replicator-1-2-filament-dust-filter
(le français suit l'anglais)
Three Dimensional Printer, ca. 2012
Manufacturer: MakerBot Industries, Brooklyn, New York, USA
Model: MakerBot Replicator
Source: Thor 3D / Thorstad Computers, Outlook, Saskatchewan
Artifact no.: AY0033.1
The MakerBot Replicator produces small objects from a digital model or blueprint produced by Computer Aided Design (CAD). Using the additive method of extrusion deposition, a thermoplastic material is deposited layer by layer to produce objects up to the size of a loaf of bread. Available since January 2012, the MakerBot 3D printer ushers in a new era in consumer home manufacturing. The two sharks visible on the platform are this machine's first 3D prints.
Curator's Corner Exhibition
MakerBot will be featured in the next Curator's Corner 3-D display scheduled to open at the museum in February 2014.
Canada Science and Technology Museums Corporation
www.sciencetech.technomuses.ca
Photo: CSTMC
Camera: GoPro Hero 3 Silver Edition
________________________________________________
Imprimante tridimensionnelle, ca. 2012
Fabricant : MakerBot Industries, Brooklyn (New York, USA)
Modèle : MakerBot Replicator
Source : Thor 3D / Thorstad Computers, Outlook (Saskatchewan)
No. d’artefact : AY0033.1
Le MakerBot Replicator produit de petits objets à partir d'un modèle numérique obtenue en utilisant la Conception assistée par ordinateur (CAO). Utilisant la technique de fabrication additive de dépôt par extrusion, un matériau thermoplastique est déposé couche par couche pour produire des objets pouvant avoir la taille d'une miche de pain. Disponible depuis janvier 2012, l’imprimante 3D MakerBot inaugure une nouvelle ère dans l'industrie manufacturière à la maison. Les deux requins visible sur la platforme sont les premières impressions produite par cette machine.
Exposition « Coin des conservateurs »
Le MakerBot sera inclus dans la prochaine expositions « Coin des conservateurs 3-D » en février 2014.
Société des musées de sciences et technologies du Canada
www.sciencetech.technomuses.ca/francais/index.cfm
Photo : SMSTC
Caméra: GoPro Hero 3 Silver Edition
The all new re-engineered and rigorously tested MakerBot Replicator+ 3D printer. Single PLA extruder. Large build volume. New, flexible build plate. Controlled via LCD screen and jog dial. On-board camera for remote monitoring. Connect it with USB cable, Wi-Fi, USB memory stick, or Ethernet. Internal power supply. See more at makerbot.creativetools.se
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
Whilst 'Berresfordsmotors' and I chose to replicate something from this steeped in folklore fleet with our Ex St. Helen's Corp. AEC Swift, this is the genuine article. NSG 869 is a prototype Albion Nimbus which was operated in several stints by the Cheddleton based firm. Miraculously it survived various culls of withdrawn vehicles, even that at the end after the closure and merger with PMT. The little bus was acquired firstly by Berresford's mechanical forman who stored it at nearby Consall, then passing to a former POPS member, but latterly and most importantly to Trevor and Carol Walters who restored it to it's present glory. It's seen here giving pleasure to it's passengers at todays Potteries Connection running day based on Longton Stoke on Trent.
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D file: www.thingiverse.com/thing:136589
Get it at: bit.ly/16bncdX
Concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers rest on an old cattle farm now an area of critical environmental concern managed by the BLM in southwest Oregon, Sept. 26, 2018. BLM photo: Matt Christenson
A quiet oak savanna in southwest Oregon has a World War II story to tell.
It was the summer of 1942 when thousands of young American troops started arriving in Oregon to prepare for battle.
Only months prior, immediately after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into WWII, the U.S. Army broke ground on Camp White, a massively ambitious training ground for troops north of Medford.
The national war effort was ramping up, and from the rationing at home to the drill sergeants yelling at new draftees, the task at hand was unified: Get America prepared for war as fast as possible.
At Camp White, in the heart of the Rogue River Valley, it got loud very quick.
Construction crews worked 24 hours a day until the base, consisting of 1,300 structures, was complete. Barracks, mess halls, a railroad, full electrical grid and sewer system were all built in six months.
And then the troops arrived.
The newly reinstated 91st Division went on 91-mile-long hikes.
They fired bazookas, mortars and tanks.
And they attacked concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers.
Despite creating what was then Oregon’s second most populous city at 40,000 people, there are now only a few lasting structures proving Camp White ever existed. Sadly, there are even fewer first-hand memories.
The pillboxes are still standing, though. They simultaneously represent a mostly forgotten military legacy and since 2013, an opportunity for historic preservation.
After decades of private cattle farming, Camp White’s pillboxes now rest on public land.
Read the full story about the Camp White pillboxes that rest on the northeast side of Upper Table Rock, an area of critical environmental concern for the BLM: www.facebook.com/notes/blm-oregon-washington/the-wwii-leg...
Experimental adjustable drive block for the Replicator 2X extruder. The purpose of this design is to allow the operator to fine-tune the pressure applied to the filament by the idler ball bearing.
The 3D-files: www.thingiverse.com/thing:267394
Instructions: bit.ly/1eaYi3p
The 3D-printer: bit.ly/1ehTaKU
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
It's the future. Prints and solid object direct from the 3D files in ABS plastic. Great for prototypes, this thing will pay for itself rather quickly.
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
- 3D-scanned by: Daniel Norée (danielnoree.com)
- 3D scanner: ASUS XTION (bit.ly/1bBmlMq)
- 3D-printed scanner grip: www.thingiverse.com/thing:126936
- 3D-scanned person: Göran Jonsson (utj.se)
- 3D-printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2X with ABS filament (bit.ly/1frEVK5)
Sources:
Concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers rest on an old cattle farm now an area of critical environmental concern managed by the BLM in southwest Oregon, Sept. 26, 2018. BLM photo: Matt Christenson
A quiet oak savanna in southwest Oregon has a World War II story to tell.
It was the summer of 1942 when thousands of young American troops started arriving in Oregon to prepare for battle.
Only months prior, immediately after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into WWII, the U.S. Army broke ground on Camp White, a massively ambitious training ground for troops north of Medford.
The national war effort was ramping up, and from the rationing at home to the drill sergeants yelling at new draftees, the task at hand was unified: Get America prepared for war as fast as possible.
At Camp White, in the heart of the Rogue River Valley, it got loud very quick.
Construction crews worked 24 hours a day until the base, consisting of 1,300 structures, was complete. Barracks, mess halls, a railroad, full electrical grid and sewer system were all built in six months.
And then the troops arrived.
The newly reinstated 91st Division went on 91-mile-long hikes.
They fired bazookas, mortars and tanks.
And they attacked concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers.
Despite creating what was then Oregon’s second most populous city at 40,000 people, there are now only a few lasting structures proving Camp White ever existed. Sadly, there are even fewer first-hand memories.
The pillboxes are still standing, though. They simultaneously represent a mostly forgotten military legacy and since 2013, an opportunity for historic preservation.
After decades of private cattle farming, Camp White’s pillboxes now rest on public land.
Read the full story about the Camp White pillboxes that rest on the northeast side of Upper Table Rock, an area of critical environmental concern for the BLM: www.facebook.com/notes/blm-oregon-washington/the-wwii-leg...
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D file: www.thingiverse.com/thing:136589
Get it at: bit.ly/16bncdX
Made to replicate a portrait of the period for an installation at Wollaton Hall. Velvet doublet and ruff with specially cast replica buttons and ouches.
Zulu Boys Traditional Ethnic Dancing at Shakaland Village Shaka Zulu Kraal Cultural Replication of a Zulu “Umuzi” or Homestead Normanhurst Farm Nkwalini Kwazulu-Natal South Africa May 1998
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
This small device traps dust in a small sponge before it enters the extruder. In some cases it can also be used to easily lubricate the filament just before it is extruded.
The adapter is designed to fit the Replicator (1) and Replicator 2 extruders.
Protecting your 3D printer's extruder from foreign particles is an important part of keeping the machine maintenance-free. This adapter makes it easy to keep the filament clean.
1 - Download the STL file
2 - 3D print it as is with standard medium or fine settings
3 - Cut two small pieces of sponge and place them into the filter case
4 - Close the case with the lid and two standard 3 mm screws
5 - Unload the filament from your Replicator 1 or 2
6 - Remove the filament guide tube
7 - Insert the loose end of the filament into the adapter.
8 - Make sure that it passes through the sponge and slides smoothly
9 - Insert the adapter into the Replicator's extruder hole
10 - Insert the filament guide tube into the top part of the adapter
11 - Enjoy hours and hours of dust-free 3D print extrusion
Check this Youtube video for more information:
Every now and then open the adapter and check the sponge for dust. Replace if necessary.
In some cases filament can jam or cause uneven 3D prints if the friction in the extruder's filament tube is too high. This adapter can also be used to lubricate the filament just before it enters the extruder.
creativetools.se/makerbot-replicator-1-2-filament-dust-filter
Concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers rest on an old cattle farm now an area of critical environmental concern managed by the BLM in southwest Oregon, Sept. 26, 2018. BLM photo: Matt Christenson
A quiet oak savanna in southwest Oregon has a World War II story to tell.
It was the summer of 1942 when thousands of young American troops started arriving in Oregon to prepare for battle.
Only months prior, immediately after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into WWII, the U.S. Army broke ground on Camp White, a massively ambitious training ground for troops north of Medford.
The national war effort was ramping up, and from the rationing at home to the drill sergeants yelling at new draftees, the task at hand was unified: Get America prepared for war as fast as possible.
At Camp White, in the heart of the Rogue River Valley, it got loud very quick.
Construction crews worked 24 hours a day until the base, consisting of 1,300 structures, was complete. Barracks, mess halls, a railroad, full electrical grid and sewer system were all built in six months.
And then the troops arrived.
The newly reinstated 91st Division went on 91-mile-long hikes.
They fired bazookas, mortars and tanks.
And they attacked concrete pillboxes built to replicate Nazi bunkers.
Despite creating what was then Oregon’s second most populous city at 40,000 people, there are now only a few lasting structures proving Camp White ever existed. Sadly, there are even fewer first-hand memories.
The pillboxes are still standing, though. They simultaneously represent a mostly forgotten military legacy and since 2013, an opportunity for historic preservation.
After decades of private cattle farming, Camp White’s pillboxes now rest on public land.
Read the full story about the Camp White pillboxes that rest on the northeast side of Upper Table Rock, an area of critical environmental concern for the BLM: www.facebook.com/notes/blm-oregon-washington/the-wwii-leg...
A replication of The Hoover Dam in the "works of man" section at Hartman's Rock Garden.
--
(Adapted from the description at RoadsideAmerica.com)
In 1932, in the heart of the Great Depression, Centerville native Ben Hartman began what would become a decade-long project: an impossibly large and complex sculpture garden made entirely of small stones, in his backyard.
Hartman's Rock Garden began small, as do many instances of Dementia Concretia -- Ben just wanted to build a little stone and concrete fish pond in his yard. He liked the finished product, and decided that he wasn't finished after all. He scavenged stone from a nearby construction site, broke it with his hammer, added bits of mirror and pottery -- and began building little stone houses, cathedrals, and parapets with religious statuary in the side and back yards of his wood-frame home. He kept building for seven years. He had the corner lot, so his work was easy to see.
Ben built a replica of Philadelphia's Independence Hall, a White House, a Mount Vernon (Ohioans can't get enough of mini-Mt. Vernons -- we saw another in Lima). A large castle with a drawbridge and moat is composed of 14,000 stones; a "Tree of Life" has over 20,000.
Ben stopped building in 1939. We suspect that he ran out of space, materials, maybe energy -- but certainly not ideas. He used something like a quarter of a million stones to create Hartman's Rock Garden.
Although Ben died in 1944, his property was maintained by his wife Mary for many years, and even won the Community Beautification Award four times in the 60's. The garden is now owned by Hartman's son, Ben Jr., and did not appear to be any longer upkept or maintained...pieces were falling apart, and weeds grew throughout (though this may just be a season growth).
Between the buildings (aside from the overgrowth) are little scenes -- a mix of history, religion, and Depression-era pop culture. Lawn statues of the Holy Family share space with garden gnomes. Small hand-written signs help visitors to distinguish one tableau from the next: Custer's Last Stand, Daniel in the Lion's Den, Noah's Ark, and "Foot path to Pece" (Peace).
"The sad part of war" is rendered with little army men, fallen or missing limbs, and accompanied by angels. Meanwhile, a healthier army prepares to storm the castle...
Ben built a depiction of the Oregon Trail, a Nativity scene, a cup and saucer. Scenes of boxer Joe Louis and the Dionne Quintuplets -- a media sensation of Canadian multiple births -- suggest what occupied the popular imagination in the 1930s.
Our favorite hand-lettered sign:
"Behold thy mother and don't forget your Dad."
Close friends with David Bailey, Both of which are British Portrait / Fashion Photographers, John Rankin Waddell (Rankin) born in the year England won the World Cup.
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
ENGLISH
Casing for MakerBot Replicator 1 3d printer.
Keeps you 3d prints in a controlled temperature environment.
As a kit.
Easily assembled in 10min.
Make your own?
Download the files from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Get one made?
www.creativetools.se/casing-for-makerbot-replicator-1-3d-...
SVENSKA
Huv för MakerBoot Replicator 1 3d-skrivare.
Håller dina 3d utskrifter i
en kontrollerad varm miljö.
Leveras som en byggsats som enkeklt kan monteras på 10 minuter.
Gör en själv?
Ladda hem filerna från: www.thingiverse.com/thing:38187
Skaffa en färdig?
www.creativetools.se/plexiglashuv-for-makerbot-replicator...
Umama Zulu Mother at Shakaland Village Shaka Zulu Kraal Cultural Replication of a Zulu “Umuzi” or Homestead Normanhurst Farm Nkwalini Kwazulu-Natal South Africa May 1998
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.
Zulu Chief at Shakaland Village Shaka Zulu Kraal Cultural Replication of a Zulu “Umuzi” or Homestead Normanhurst Farm Nkwalini Kwazulu-Natal South Africa May 1998
The all new re-engineered and rigorously tested MakerBot Replicator+ 3D printer. Single PLA extruder. Large build volume. New, flexible build plate. Controlled via LCD screen and jog dial. On-board camera for remote monitoring. Connect it with USB cable, Wi-Fi, USB memory stick, or Ethernet. Internal power supply. See more at makerbot.creativetools.se
ENGLISH
These images show the unboxing and setup of the MakerBot Replicator 2 personal 3D printer.
SVENSKA
Dessa bilder visar uppackningen och igångsättning av MakerBot Replicator 3D-skrivare.