Sound good, a recommendation I would give is to print at 100% infill, since that'll help against thermal deformation, and maybe anneal it for better performance (will shrink a bit if annealed, so the model might have to be scaled up a tiny bit)Not sure what he used but only time will tell. Iāll ask him though.
I think balsawood..What material did he use?
Sound good, a recommendation I would give is to print at 100% infill, since that'll help against thermal deformation, and maybe anneal it for better performance (will shrink a bit if annealed, so the model might have to be scaled up a tiny bit)
Otherwise, that looks like a pretty cool project and definitely want to see the progress of it
For sure!Nice! keep us updated please
LOL
Thatās very nice of him to do for essentially free with the cost of metal and running a cnc lolAny update on this @SooopraSD? Again, I'd gladly pay you for access to the CAD file and would agree not to share it in any capacity (with the minor exception of the following). I have a friend with a CNC machine and several large chunks of aluminium. He said he'd be happy to carve some of it up as long as the component is CNC-able, which from the pictures it appears to be. If you don't want to that's all good, just let me know so I can work on something more permanent for myself. Don't want to reinvent the wheel.