Archive for August, 2010

Using Makerbot for Dishwasher Repair

makerbot-dishwasher-repair

I hung out with Mary at Maker Faire last weekend and he’s emphasized how awesome it is to have a MakerBot in your life to just make anything that needs fixing. Broken things that you can fix with a MakerBot in the house means that someone gets to be a superhero. Daryll fixed his dishwasher with a MakerBotted part. Awesome!

[Daryll Strauss'] dishwasher had some problems that he traced to a worn out part on the upper spinning arm. The hackerspace he belongs to has a Makerbot and he though this would be the perfect opportunity to print his own replacement part. He picked up some inexpensive digital calipers and set to work mapping out the dimensions of the broken piece. He took his hand-drawn cross section and built a replica part in Blender. Once he had it just right he generated the g-code and printed the part. His replacement works very well, and it’s a bit thicker (by design) than the original so hopefully that means it will hold up longer.

via Using Makerbot for dishwasher repair – Hack a Day.

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Making the Makerbot, A DIY 3-D Printer | Popular Science

The gang over at POPSCI have made a MakerBot. Awesome!

It sounds like the promise of an ad in the back of a PopSci issue from the 1950s. Build your own replicating machine! Make anything you desire in your own garage! But that’s exactly what veteran hacker Bre Pettis and his pals offer with their CupCake CNC kit: a computer-controlled 3-D printer that can whip up almost any object of less than four inches on a side from two kinds of plastic. The company’s goal is to make home manufacturing cheap and common.

They mention that it’s hard to use the software. I wish they’d had the latest version of ReplicatorG when they did the article. Printing has become a lot easier since then!

I had a chance to go back and forth with John Carnett who put it together and not onlly is he an awesome photographer, he’s a totally legit tinkerer who’s done some cool stuff!

via Making the Makerbot, A DIY 3-D Printer | Popular Science.

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MakerBot is Hiring: Web Warrior Wanted

warrior

The botswarm is expanding. We’re looking to hire on a new person for our team, and this time we’re looking for someone to help us on the virtual side of things. Besides making Thingiverse an awesome place for the 3D printing community, there is a lot of backend software needed to run a hardware company. We’re looking for a talented and brave soul to help us continue rocking the free by democratizing manufacturing.

Is this you? Is this someone you know? If so, check out our job posting for the job requirements.

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The MakerBot Operators Tips Video 001: Solving Manifold Problems in Blender

As a part of making the debut “Meet the MakerBot Operator” profile video, I worked with the Nick and Winter to co-create the “MakerBot Operators Tips” video released here.

When downloading objects from Thingiverse.com, Nick and Winter take time to repair manifold (“water-tightness”) issues with models in blender before feeding them into Skeinforge to create printable gcode.

After Nick and Winter fix the model to make it well and truly manifold, they take the time to re-post the fix back to Thingiverse as a derivative to help others print the object more easily. This is, in my opinion at least, a pretty awesome community service that helps everyone print objects more easily.

— Matt Griffin

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Recyclebot makes HDPE for your MakerBot from Milk Jugs!

recyclebot

The crew over at Victoria University of Wellington are rocking it by working on a recycler that attaches to your MakerBot and recycles milk jugs into filament. How cool is that! Check out their whole archive!

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