Комментарии:
interesting you mentioned a jigsaw cut which could be right for faces or busts
ОтветитьI hope you still dont have that facial hair lol
ОтветитьHow would you print a large thin walled figure with a corrugated layer on the inner wall for vertical strength like corrugated cardboard?
ОтветитьCame from the video. Subbed for the Mutton Chops
ОтветитьYea use this software its only $5200 a yr how bout a video for us poor folks
ОтветитьHow do you deal with the small warping of the prints? My prints look flat but when I pull them off the printer there is a minor warp so the pieces do not come together perfectly straight.
ОтветитьNice video this looks a great bit of software for businesses, but unless I’m missing something it looks too expensive for casual / hobbyist use even with the token model, if they did a pay per use it might fly but almost £300/yr for tokens that simply expire if not used.
ОтветитьHey Mat, would it be viable to make room for support structures like Aluminum cross sections to add support, strength and alignment to assemble super large structures?
Ответитьbruh i just want to print something that is 7-8ft tall
ОтветитьYea im not paying $13,880 for a computer program..
ОтветитьExtremely helpful and concise video! Thank you!!!
ОтветитьThose sideburns, though.
ОтветитьEspecially since I'm going to print all my kitchen cabinetry
ОтветитьHow to print a 3d printer with a small 3d printer.
Ответитьthanks for sharing! very useful.
ОтветитьThanks for tutorial :)
ОтветитьWhat about how to créate grooves like hexybase does to assemble 3d printed speakers?
ОтветитьLocking joints like on removable camera lens please
Ответитьanyone know of a company that will print large parts (30x6x2") in SLS? I know they're out there, just can't find one...
ОтветитьCertain parts you can use threads to put them together
ОтветитьUse mortise and tennon joints so you're not just gluing flat faces together.
ОтветитьHelpful video. Thanks for sharing
ОтветитьHow to calculate how much plastic needed to print large objects?
ОтветитьCan you do it on the Maker Bot 3d printer big 3d printer size objects.
ОтветитьGreat video!
ОтветитьWhy didnt you put a link to the software in the info ?
ОтветитьGreat tips, thanks.
Ответитьyour facial hair impedes my ability to take you seriously
ОтветитьAre their any cutting tools like this inside MatterHackers: matter control 2? Please add that and a cut feature!
Ответитьnetfabb a waste of money, any 3d modeler will work
ОтветитьIs there a way of doing this in mattercontrol?
ОтветитьAre the segmented STL files for the examples posted anywhere? I'd like to try printing that submarine...
ОтветитьGood video!
ОтветитьWhat adhesive do you recommend if we're trying to put a print together to make a casting mold?
ОтветитьA new mic or something, please. I would like to watch more of the video but just get a headache from the bad audio.
ОтветитьMy printer already prints outside its print volume. 😂
Seriously, great tips.
Have you tried 3dgloop glue for PLA? Way better than CA glue.
ОтветитьDo I have to worry about tolerance with these body splits?
Ответитьinfo is great. camera lens is strange.
ОтветитьI personally prefer a tongue and groove method for joining parts. Alignment is simple this way. Of course, I generally am designing my own parts and not trying to cut someone else's, so I purposely design to fit my build volume, and I design in the joinings accordingly.
ОтветитьGreat stuff
ОтветитьInstead of making rectangular registration keys, you can just cut out 2mm diameter cilinders, and use bits of filament to help you align the parts ;) (not my idea, just sharing the tip)
ОтветитьNice video as always.
You can also use this technique instead of supports if you cut in the right spots.
Awesome video, please do a step-by-step video on Netfab (and use free features only - if possible). Would love to see more on registration technique you use.
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