They don't make it easy to find the free version, the subscription is easy to find. Search for Fusion 360 free and you should get there quickly.Free you say? Could be a good project.
They don't make it easy to find the free version, the subscription is easy to find. Search for Fusion 360 free and you should get there quickly.Free you say? Could be a good project.
Or the end of the world? What if they start printing themselves?Figure out how to print a 3D printer...
Profit..!
Clone wars!Or the end of the world? What if they start printing themselves?
Did you ever get these? If not, what colour are you looking for? I assume you want the slightly smaller ones that don't hit the fork?Anyone in kw make me a couple of headlight globes? Will pay decently.
Super Tenere Headlight cover by Bikelord
A headlight cover to suit a Yamaha Super Tenere XT1200Z.For use if you have a larger than normal light globe, such as a LED H7 with a heat sink on the back.You will need to remove the rubber o-ring from the stock cover and fit it to the printed model.VERSION 2V2 has been slightly tweaked to...www.thingiverse.com
No i haven't got them. Black or grey. And yes they need to clear the forks.Did you ever get these? If not, what colour are you looking for? I assume you want the slightly smaller ones that don't hit the fork?
Thanks. Pishop was out of stock earlier today. Got one coming now.It looks like I was so lucky to start with a "user-friendly" printer that didn't require much work to start printing..
Btw, don't forget to properly maintain your printer (e.g. lubricate it and so on). It makes a difference with the print results.
I'm buying all my Raspberry Pis/Teensy/other electronics from these 2 places:
Current Raspberry Pi Boards in Canada
One stop for ALL Pi needs. Add-ons, HATs, UPS, cases, SD cards, accessories, projects and ideas.www.pishop.caRaspberry Pi
The Raspberry Pi 4 Model B is the latest Raspberry Pi single board computers. It offers increases in processor speed, multimedia performance, memory, and connectivity with a 64-bit quad-core Cortex-A72 (ARM v8) while retaining backwards compatibility and similar power consumption.www.canadarobotix.com
I believe they have stuff in stock and the price is reasonable. Check them out..
I'm open to learning but I've got lots of learning going on at the moment. May as well simplify my life and buy an easy and proven solution. We are talking <$100 for the proven solution, that doesn't buy you much time to learn.If you are open to learning and less hand holding the STM ARM microcontrollers are much cheaper than the Raspberry stuff.
Can you recommend some places where to buy good dev boards with it? My quick search only gave me the options around $35 per board.. which is not cheap, considering that I can buy Teensy 4.1 for $36 or Teensy 4.0 for $27 and they have ARM Cortext-M7 instead of Cortext-M3..If you are open to learning and less hand holding the STM ARM microcontrollers are much cheaper than the Raspberry stuff.
btw, octopi can be installed on Pi Zero 2. I absolutely LOVE Pi Zero and Zero 2.. these boards provide so much for under $20 (Pi Zero is less than $8)!!!! I have quite a few of them in different projects.. including one that I killed accidentally by shorting 5v and groundI'm open to learning but I've got lots of learning going on at the moment. May as well simplify my life and buy an easy and proven solution. We are talking <$100 for the proven solution, that doesn't buy you much time to learn.
I just went with this recommendation:btw, octopi can be installed on Pi Zero 2. I absolutely LOVE Pi Zero and Zero 2.. these boards provide so much for under $20 (Pi Zero is less than $8)!!!! I have quite a few of them in different projects.. including one that I killed accidentally by shorting 5v and ground
Totally agree with you! I just recently replaced an old laptop with Pi 4B and now it drives my wall monitors with dashboards.. it's so awesome that they've added 2 micro-hdmi to it!I just went with this recommendation:
"Which Raspberry Pi is best for OctoPrint?
To get started with OctoPrint, here's what you'll need: Raspberry Pi: OctoPrint strongly recommends the Raspberry Pi models 3B, 3B+, or 4B. Raspberry Pi versions 1 and 2 are compatible with OctoPrint but not officially supported, and the Pi Zero is “not recommended explicitly“
Life's to short to be fighting with a controller or waiting ages for a laggy interface.
Btw, I hope one of your first 3d prints will be a case for your Pi : ) there are quite a few of them on thingiverse and they are awesome!I just went with this recommendation:
"Which Raspberry Pi is best for OctoPrint?
To get started with OctoPrint, here's what you'll need: Raspberry Pi: OctoPrint strongly recommends the Raspberry Pi models 3B, 3B+, or 4B. Raspberry Pi versions 1 and 2 are compatible with OctoPrint but not officially supported, and the Pi Zero is “not recommended explicitly“
Life's to short to be fighting with a controller or waiting ages for a laggy interface.
Some exist. I suspect I'll need to respin one though. I like the installation under the control pad. The pi I bought has different plugout from the download and print model. Oh well, get to learn about bringing stl into modelling software.Btw, I hope one of your first 3d prints will be a case for your Pi : ) there are quite a few of them on thingiverse and they are awesome!
You can print flexible. Direct drive makes it easier. I haven't tried it but flexible material and bowden tube seems like a recipe for heartache. Search for TPU to head in the right direction.My buddy set up his entire house for smart devices and is running the server off his Raspberry Pi. Everything is connected, doors, windows, switches, garage door, lights, and exterior gate. Actually pretty slick what he's done with it.
He also designed his entire renovation in 3D SketchUp and had his wife go through the house with an Oculus to make changes before they touched anything. Genius.
Anyway 2 questions:
- is it possible to print with a rubberized / flexible material? We have a kitchen device that has a soft seal and as it's an older model they're hard to come by. I was able to get a seal, but expecting this one to fail with time.
- what would be a good way to 3D print an enclosure for this: https://www.canadiantire.ca/en/pdp/...fast-wireless-charging-pad-0357360p.html#srp? I'd like to set up a Qi charger in my Volt so need it to actually HOLD the phone in place.