Go to homepage
9 / 20
May 2015

Solidoodle’s are garbage and the company is even worse. I basically rebuilt all of mine because factory parts are so poorly constructed. Their company can’t stay organized, is months late on shipments, and terrible quality of printers.

1 month later

I have done the upgrade with lawsy’s carriages, and I would actually not recommend them. There is a different one on thingiverse: The Remodeling of the Linear bushing for Solidoodle by ichibey - Thingiverse 2 that I think might actually work better. I haven’t tried it yet, but it addresses some of the problems I have had with Lawsy’s design, namely the bearings not being tightly held by the parts, requiring careful adjustment to make sure there is no play. This design seems to address that with the zip ties.

As for the rods, I did use the originals, and I think I was able to retrieve all of the parts intact. The x-axis bars are the hardest to remove, but they are just superglued into the carriages. Gently torquing them should be able to break the bond. One thing to be very careful of, the stock bars are not hardened , so the bearings can damage them if you overtighten the system.

I agree about the LM8UU bearings being loose in the original Lawsy carriage design.

This is why I actually printed a re-mix of them. The ‘snap-fit’ remix of the Lawsy carriages:

Definitely a super tight fit with them. I have also seen pictures of people wrapping the bearings with tape to fit the bearings snugly in the carriages.

Once the belts are tight, there is no play. I havent had any problems with the setup.

Also, I made sure that the printer was calibrated as good as possible before printing the carriages to ensure dimensional accuracy.