On 3DP, most of the time when I think “hey I could 3d print something to solve that problem”, I end up with two problems. Avoiding having to solve the first problem is utterly the most powerful if unconventional tool.
Thus I haven’t printed anything for about two months. I’m not even sure the printer will be staying around.
I have that problem about half the time myself; trying to wrap my brain around how to create the object in a CAD program that was designed by Mussolini's best torturers (The BEST of them feel that way... the worst require that you reprogram your own brain into some form of eldritch horror) is often the reason a thing that could EASILY be printed NEVER gets designed.
But I find the pleasure from beating that spawn of cluster-fucking nulls into submission OCCASIONALLY makes the product worthwhile; often enough that I don't just dismiss a project out of hand and occasionally exceed myself by tackling something I don't already know how to make in Fusion. The stuff I do know how to make... simple shapes and "simple machines"... I do all the time. I don't even think about it; it's just a part of my life now.
Like these little spacers I made while we were discussing all this:
This adapter was manufactured wrong; probably some bean-counter found someone else to get the thumbscrews from for a dollar a hundred cheaper than the ones specced by the engineer, but didn't notice or didn't care (or maybe the "engineer" never bothered to double-check) that they are 3mm too long and bottom out in any standard DVI port without actually tightening the thing down.
If I'd had the right size spacers in my quadcopter parts bins, I'd have used them, but I didn't. Took me a minute to design & render. 5 minutes to print. Used a penny's worth of filament.
It would've taken maybe 2 minutes to get out my Dremel, put a cutoff wheel in it, and cut those threads down so it fits. But a cutoff wheel costs a lot more than a penny, and doing it this way moves the knurled part up a little higher, so it's easier for my big old Shrek-hands to tighten them down. Yes, I REALLY DID consider all this when deciding how fix this thing.
And now my wife can use her new monitor without the cable dingus falling out and making the screen flash & flicker. And I have a little more life in my Dremel supplies for when I really NEED it.
Happy wife = Happy life.
mnem
And it took me 15 minutes to pen this missive describing the events.