yeah, sorry Dee, I did find a setting, unrelated to the export function , so I deleted my question, the setting was "facetres" defaulting to 0.5 which can be adjusted as high as 10, 3 seems visually ok
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Here is what happens when you print a tall part and it comes loose from the print bed. It is both comical and tragic:). Worst part is that this happed at ~60% completion just after my last check before going to bed.
Doesn't mean it is a total loss. When a print fails you can use that to check:
-Fitment of interlocking parts ( a tad bit tight for this one, so I'll change the gap from 0.1mm to 0.15mm)
-See how well the details come through on the print
-Identify at what height the parts failed, and change the plan of how to slice the part, or add extra support to make for a taller successful print.
(commentary in pictures)3 Photos
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What do you fellas think of this idea? Seems simple, and probably a way to screw a plane up really fast, but I did that small panel on a scrap wing in about 2 minutes as a test. I'm printing the second prototype now, increasing the height of the center guide ridge a bit ( shown in the rendering is ver 2) . It needs a handle but I thought it worked pretty well and wow was it fast.2 Photos
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bbaumer = Genius Of The Day Award!!
I'm assuming the ridge between the two spoked wheels is sized in order to fit within a panel line, to act as a guide for consistent spacing?Live Q&A every Tuesday and Friday at 9pm EST on my Twitch Livestream
Live chat with me and other RC Nuts on my Discord
Camp my Instagram @Alpha.Makes
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Originally posted by bbaumer View PostWhat do you fellas think of this idea? Seems simple, and probably a way to screw a plane up really fast, but I did that small panel on a scrap wing in about 2 minutes as a test. I'm printing the second prototype now, increasing the height of the center guide ridge a bit ( shown in the rendering is ver 2) . It needs a handle but I thought it worked pretty well and wow was it fast.
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Originally posted by Alpha.MotionRC View Postbbaumer = Genius Of The Day Award!!
I'm assuming the ridge between the two spoked wheels is sized in order to fit within a panel line, to act as a guide for consistent spacing?
I think you'd want a partial wheel as well, maybe a couple of small flats
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Originally posted by bbaumer View Post
Well, my first center ridge was too small, and hard to stay aligned, so Im increasing it to see how it works
I think you'd want a partial wheel as well, maybe a couple of small flats
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Originally posted by bbaumer View Post
Perhaps I could split it into 3 layers, and you could remove one as necessary, I'll see how the geometry on this second print works out and go from there
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Here is a printable file if anyone wants to try it. It has its shortcomings, keeping it level can be tricky, overruns and overlaps may be an issue. There is no "back button" either. :Sweating:
The center hole is 1/4" so you can make an axle out of about anything you've got lying about.
I printed a small handle for it but didn't find that design too practical. I'd certainly recommend practicing on something you don't care too much about
Willing to consider ideas for a better design
Attached Files1 Photo
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Here's an idea to toss around: Add a protruding tab to prevent the tool from spinning in the opposite direction. Essentially this creates a ratcheted wheel. This feature may help prevent a situation where the user moves the tool forward and then slips slightly before moving it backward, resulting in misaligned rivets.
I used a similar metal spoked tool for scale modeling, but a 3DP tool for foam is genius, bbaumer! This will be a day long remembered.Live Q&A every Tuesday and Friday at 9pm EST on my Twitch Livestream
Live chat with me and other RC Nuts on my Discord
Camp my Instagram @Alpha.Makes
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Originally posted by bbaumer View PostWhat do you fellas think of this idea? Seems simple, and probably a way to screw a plane up really fast, but I did that small panel on a scrap wing in about 2 minutes as a test. I'm printing the second prototype now, increasing the height of the center guide ridge a bit ( shown in the rendering is ver 2) . It needs a handle but I thought it worked pretty well and wow was it fast.
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