I’m sure that it takes practice to account for shrinkage etc of different thermoplastics etc. Give me a mill and a lathe anytime.
3D printing is tantamount to witchcraft
3D printing is tantamount to witchcraft
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Yeah... I'm really relating to that. I just went through another iteration of my 4S3P Battery holder. Finally separated the upper from the lower stepped base. There are just a couple of differences that need to be handled differently.3D printing is tantamount to witchcraft
I hear it is quite similar to OnShape.
Post some pics!I have a home made CNC
It is certainly handy. Moving it place to place really sucks though.Well. I'm jealous!
I'll give it a look.Have you checked out CamBam yet? The guys at the Gainesville Hackerspace just love it. I'm going to try it out when I get to using the Maslow CNC.
Well. I'm jealous! Have you checked out CamBam yet? The guys at the Gainesville Hackerspace just love it. I'm going to try it out when I get to using the Maslow CNC.
@Asheron the only way to get better/good at CAD is to force yourself into it. Like @James79 said: Youtube is your friend! The thing I really liked about www.OnShape.com were the online tutorials. I got up one Sunday and decided I was going to learn CAD. By that afternoon, I had a fairly complex drawing started. I had stopped using it for about six months (Fiji and then my broken leg and all), so I was worried when I had to go back into those files and relearn it to make some modifications. It took a bit of perseverance, and now I've even added some more skills. I am delightfully adequate for designing what I want to design. If Ma~ would stop sleeping on my legs so I could get up to measure things, I would be doing even better!