Rapid demo and prototyping featured demo: Spatial hearing
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Lucky you. Unfortunately I haven’t used the Nobel 1.0 or the form 2 BUT i have used the Form 1 and with proper maintenance it was great. I assume the second edition will have improvements. I hope you find some better feedback!
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Lol just checked. Nice work! Mines bee up for a few weeks has +500 visits, and no orders. I plan to use the forums for advice and examples of what’s seems to work then mimic. Study is taking its time. I’d be happy to hear what you find and why others have to say. Good Luck!
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Have you taken care of all the verification steps 3D Hubs prepares?
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It is prototyping after all, I’ll stop my amazon on my way to Facebook or something haha
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I haven’t, no need as of yet… But maybe it’s time… I’ve used a variety of other printers capable of 5.0 microns or 0.005mm. I considered recommending a resin deposition type but they’re probably over kill and more expensive for this application.
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One word you might want to look up is parametric as it relaters to modeling. If you do better with shapes and drawing you might look into FreeCAD (similar to solidworks) or if you code more you might look up OpenScad. There are tutorials all over the internet. You can use equations in either of thes…
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you will want to check to be sure its not lose and isnt slipping. then re-level your bed.
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I may have a few people at my school (university of utah) who may have heaps of em. you can email me here jacob.kolb@utah.edu if you want to follow up. Jacob
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Hi Jamie! This is something you can do with any printer depending on the color and resolution you require on the low end (down to about 0.10mm). For example the finest line my printer can make is 0.40mm wide and variable from 0.20mm to 0.40mm in height. submit it to my hub and I’ll take a look at …
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I am not familiar with your exact printer but one thing I will often forget to check is the Z end stop.
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You have asked a very basic big question. Yes you can use a 3d printer to create prototypes and print them as many times as you need. You need modeling software and slicing software you can find may good options for these if you search the forums and discussions. I how this offers a few terms for …
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See if you can track down the pdf manual for your printer before it arrives, for me this helps from jumping ahead once it arrives -_- What you really need .stl and .obj model files like you can get form programs like 123design or SolidWorks, or OpenScad. You will then need a slicer like Cura or Sli…
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theres a bunch of things to get familiar with and learn as you complete more prints. I would suggest having another slicer on hand (a program like cura) since not all .stl or .obj will be process or slice to desired equally. i have been using Slic3r recently and am using it over cura at the moment. …
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Looks like you’re printing up to your printers capacity, it looks good!. Are you using a skirt? the edges look a bit(like not really tho) ruff around the bottom, you can print the skirt one layer away just to be sure you’re extruding then start the print, however if im having trouble with a print st…
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you might lower the layer height just a bit to get more definition. better quality pictures are a MUST. You might be over extruding, but its hard to tell from those pictures. You seem to have good bridging on the top loop tho so be sure to not tune that out when you make other corrections. 1. highe…