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"CNC - 3D printing, milling and more"
+1 for the section.Name... Something to the effect of "DIY automated manufacturing (CNC, 3D printing, etc)", perhaps?
Mechanical forum?
I prefer CNC subractive manufacturing, old school. Good 3D printers can do sintered metals, a wide range of plastics but that is professional printers. Home and hobby printers that essentially dribble hot snot everywhere are a waste of time and money.
Quote from: chris_leyson on February 13, 2016, 04:33:19 pmI prefer CNC subractive manufacturing, old school. Good 3D printers can do sintered metals, a wide range of plastics but that is professional printers. Home and hobby printers that essentially dribble hot snot everywhere are a waste of time and money.I don't know what you consider to be acceptable quality but these are the results I get from my hobby printer. I think it's quite acceptable, Most of the parts printed are mechanical upgrades for the printer itself.
Quote from: chris_leyson on February 13, 2016, 04:33:19 pmI prefer CNC subractive manufacturing, old school. Good 3D printers can do sintered metals, a wide range of plastics but that is professional printers. Home and hobby printers that essentially dribble hot snot everywhere are a waste of time and money.Wow there grampa, don't get too cranky. I have a 12" Prusa i3v printer and have to say it's one of the best investments I've ever made. But different strokes for different folks I guess...
Quote from: ANTALIFE on February 29, 2016, 01:39:20 amQuote from: chris_leyson on February 13, 2016, 04:33:19 pmI prefer CNC subractive manufacturing, old school. Good 3D printers can do sintered metals, a wide range of plastics but that is professional printers. Home and hobby printers that essentially dribble hot snot everywhere are a waste of time and money.Wow there grampa, don't get too cranky. I have a 12" Prusa i3v printer and have to say it's one of the best investments I've ever made. But different strokes for different folks I guess... What's the sellable non-artistical non-decoration-only usable product you produced with it?
I printed feet for my vintage oscilloscope... I also printed a small electronics enclosure, which I can mod by adding holes of exactly the right dimensions without having to pay hundreds of pounds for the punches (e.g. BNC sockets).
Hmm, plastic replicas of an existing elastomer massproduct, and a thermoplastic electronics enclosure that gives a solution for who refuses to buy a drill.I don't doubt you had fun with it, transferring the model in the software etcetera, but it still fully complies to the description I gave.Try to produce a product outside the description, and you WILL be forced to get into that "Wow there grampa, don't get too cranky" range of computerised manufacuring methods.