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. I’ll 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
That’s 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.