I’ve designed some for that. Is this what you need. I can send you the STL filesAnyone printing the little hinge parts of the telescopic guide for the Ducato Remis side window blinds?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I’ve designed some for that. Is this what you need. I can send you the STL filesAnyone printing the little hinge parts of the telescopic guide for the Ducato Remis side window blinds?
Here’s a better picture. You fit black M3 button head bolts in the holes to act as hinge pins. Much stronger. Just let me know if anyone wants the STL files. If you wanted them printed with the bolts ready to go, I sell them for £10 a pair incl p&p, but the files you can have.Anyone printing the little hinge parts of the telescopic guide for the Ducato Remis side window blinds?
Hi refailanybody still do a bracket to attach a huawei B535 router on the wall in the van please
Looks like there's a design on Thingiverse?anybody still do a bracket to attach a huawei B535 router on the wall in the van please
Subscribers do not see these advertisements
Hard question. I'm not up to recent changes, so others might know more. Quite a few people have the Original Prusa i3. They aren't particularly flashy and aren't especially cheap, but they are reliable. The Volkswagen Golf of the 3d printer world. There are cheaper options, but it used to be that they were a pain to set up, not sure if that's still the case. My first printer often took an hour of fiddling to get a print to start and then would frequently fail, so longer prints weren't an option. The Prusa can be left for months and still self calibrate and print without any mucking around. I've had very few print or technical failures with it. I've printed 5 hour parts without issue. I know some people that have done 24 hour parts...My son has been looking at 3d printers, what sort would you recommend. Hes only going to be doing hobby stuff and PC related parts for his friends etc.
Here’s a picture of my design if anyone would like the STL files. The files are free. TheBig1 has a picture of it fitted.Looks like there's a design on Thingiverse?
Wall mount for Huawei Router Model B535-232 by Stovlar
A wall mount for the specified Router, drill one or two (for extra grip) holes per hanger. 2 hangers recommended per router. Really solid fit and was designed to be used in a caravan. Designed with PETG in mind for flex and extra strengthwww.thingiverse.com
+1 for the Prusa I've owned for two years now. However, at £700 a pop my little bits will take a long time to complete the amortisation!Hard question. I'm not up to recent changes, so others might know more. Quite a few people have the Original Prusa i3. They aren't particularly flashy and aren't especially cheap, but they are reliable. The Volkswagen Golf of the 3d printer world. There are cheaper options, but it used to be that they were a pain to set up, not sure if that's still the case. My first printer often took an hour of fiddling to get a print to start and then would frequently fail, so longer prints weren't an option. The Prusa can be left for months and still self calibrate and print without any mucking around. I've had very few print or technical failures with it. I've printed 5 hour parts without issue. I know some people that have done 24 hour parts...
3d printers still aren't at the point where they are fire and forget. They are getting better, but they still take some learning. Some people have printers because modifying and making the printers themselves is the fun bit. Others just print random stuff that they've downloading from Thingiverse. That's fine. But I like to make my own stuff... The design bit also takes skill that takes time to learn.
Note: The above applies to FDM printers (which take a spool of plastic, melt it and squirt it out of the nozzle like cake icing). SLA printing uses a light sensitive fluid that gets exposed to harden layer by layer. These were far too expensive and limited to smaller models when I bought my Prusa, but the prices are dropping.
My son has been looking at 3d printers, what sort would you recommend. Hes only going to be doing hobby stuff and PC related parts for his friends etc.
Subscribers do not see these advertisements
We take our Prusa Mini+ away with us. It has its own little place in the van.If I wasn't fulltiming I would buy one of these. Doubt I would ever make my money back, but boy does it look like fun.
Excellent exactly what I need.Here’s a better picture. You fit black M3 button head bolts in the holes to act as hinge pins. Much stronger. Just let me know if anyone wants the STL files. If you wanted them printed with the bolts ready to go, I sell them for £10 a pair incl p&p, but the files you can have.
PaulandChrissy.
View attachment 520257
As a fulltimer space is a huge issue. Not sure they would like being bounced around continuously either?We take our Prusa Mini+ away with us. It has its own little place in the van.
Subscribers do not see these advertisements
Space is definitely the biggest problem. My mini+ is the only one I would take with us. It takes travelling in its stride.As a fulltimer space is a huge issue. Not sure they would like being bounced around continuously either?
Subscribers do not see these advertisements
Agreed. It’s all about enjoying making something better, or making something that nobody has thought of before. The power of Utube will make you a master of CAD. I knew nothing about CAD and can now make almost anything that pops into my head. Just a few weeks of uTube is all it takes.I’m not sure that if you purchase a 3 d printer it about getting your money’s worth. I would think it’s about improving designs and getting what you want when you want it. With me it’s lack of computer knowledge using CAD
I struggled with Fusion 360 until I did a 3 day online course earlier this year. Really opened my eyes and I find it much easier now.I'm currently playing with Fusion360 to make the designs, but I really don't know what I'm doing. It's all trial and error. I frequently try to make minor changes to the design and end up with a squiggle of random lines. So I undo or redraw whole bits again. Maybe I'll figure it out eventually.
I've had more success with OpenSCAD where you write a simple commands like BASIC for the shapes you want in 3d. But it gets hard very quickly if you want anything that's not geometric.
Once you have mastered the basics, it all becomes enjoyable. I like to add a new skill to my fusion 360 knowledge each week. You suddenly find better ways to design things. My favourite is LOFTING. You can make shapes with lofting you never thought possible. Great fun.I struggled with Fusion 360 until I did a 3 day online course earlier this year. Really opened my eyes and I find it much easier now.
It was this https://www.armada.co.uk/course/fusion-360-training/
A bit expensive but really worthwhile
Peter
That’s a bit like the ones I make. I love the orange.
Subscribers do not see these advertisements
I particularly like the 'Sweep' command. Makes lids fit properly!Once you have mastered the basics, it all becomes enjoyable. I like to add a new skill to my fusion 360 knowledge each week. You suddenly find better ways to design things. My favourite is LOFTING. You can make shapes with lofting you never thought possible. Great fun.
I can see we are going to end up voting for the best command in fusion 360. What a sad bunch we are.I particularly like the 'Sweep' command. Makes lids fit properly!
I vote Undo.I can see we are going to end up voting for the best command in fusion 360. What a sad bunch we are.
Undo is probably the most frequently used I’m sure.I vote Undo.
If you do the online course you can forget undo. He gives you a really structured method which is so logical and makes the whole process work.Undo is probably the most frequently used I’m sure.
Subscribers do not see these advertisements