Thats pretty sweet, I appreciate the offer, but Scotland would be a bit expensive I think for shipping. I live in Boston and have a bit of services around here thanks to MIT and all the other tech schools in the area. The print will be big too… about 585mm wide, so its gonna be $$. I made the walls only 2mm thick per some forums I read and put a .5mm gap between the parts that have to slide along each other.
Now that iv’e got the hang of how to properly utilize the sketch and extrude. If I create a extrude “structure/form/part” not sure the proper term. If i want to see how the different parts fit, can i just move the ‘bodies’ around and not mess up my sketches.
Well, had to offer! .5mm clearance should be plenty. It sounds mechanical so I’d suggest you use 40% infill.
My guess is that your sketches will stay in global space and not move with your object. You will probably be able to move your objects along fixes lines in the X Y and X direction. Last I saw on Fusion360 you can make “assemblies” where you can put the pieces together and even do some basic simulations but that does’t sound completely necessary.
You can still resize them. move your timeline to before you moved them and then adjust the dimensions. Thats what makes the timeline such a great feature
You should fix your z axis wobble before offering print services. Dont want to have your hub filled with bad reviews from poor quality right away. Besides you will be losing money since you would need to give refunds for that print quality. Take the time to learn your printer and get great results first.
You say it as if I literally just got my printer and set up my hub. That’s not the case. I’ve spent a lot of time working with this printer and I’ve spend months before hand researching everything I could to design my foldable printer. With that knowledge I was able to assemble the entire printer without the instructions (until the motherboard, where I was then able to hunt down exactly what board it was and wire it up). I recently redesigned the X axis assembly, printed out my parts and reflashed the board successfully the first time.
my Z axis wobble is nearly completely eliminated. I’ve got the ends tapes and clamped in self-centering couplers and really the only improvement I can see to make now is to add proper lead screws.
the review I got for the test print was 4.8/5, 4/5 for quality in the breakdown. I know it’s not perfect but I don’t exactly have the money to get it to 5.
Besides, I take pride in my work and where necessary would reprint or do some light finishing.
Then create a new sketch, select the face of the base and draw your circles on top of that. Select and extrude the circles.
Also on the left pane you’ll see your sketches in the component tree. If you want to change your sketch parameters you simply double click on the sketch and adjust, add or remove what you want. And the rest of the timeline will take the change automatically.