- Joined
- Jul 8, 2009
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If additive machining, 3D printing, blunders count, then I've got one for your amusement.
I was printing a replacement part for one of the R/C conversions I was working on, and the part was about 1/2mm too long. Went into the 3D CAD, shortened the part by 1/2mm, saved the file, and reprinted the part.(Remember that, I SAVED the file!) It was still too long, Oh well, I guess the calibrated Mk.I eyeball was a little off. I shortened the part another 1/2mm, rinse and repeat. It was still too long.
I repeated this a couple more times and the part kept coming out long. By now I'm starting to think the 3D CAD software is screwing up somewhere, so I 'm off down that rabbit hole for a while.
Finally it dawned on me, I had SAVED the CAD file every time that I had updated it, but I had NEVER updated the STL file for the slicing software. By now the part was about 4mm too short.
So if additive machining blunders and boo-boos count, I think this one qualifies.
Don
I was printing a replacement part for one of the R/C conversions I was working on, and the part was about 1/2mm too long. Went into the 3D CAD, shortened the part by 1/2mm, saved the file, and reprinted the part.(Remember that, I SAVED the file!) It was still too long, Oh well, I guess the calibrated Mk.I eyeball was a little off. I shortened the part another 1/2mm, rinse and repeat. It was still too long.
I repeated this a couple more times and the part kept coming out long. By now I'm starting to think the 3D CAD software is screwing up somewhere, so I 'm off down that rabbit hole for a while.
Finally it dawned on me, I had SAVED the CAD file every time that I had updated it, but I had NEVER updated the STL file for the slicing software. By now the part was about 4mm too short.
So if additive machining blunders and boo-boos count, I think this one qualifies.
Don
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