The rolling storage box is an old market failure, the Roly kit came out in 1997. I do love the idea of a small one for tiny electronics, my mother bought one in the 90's and kept sewing supplies in it till my dad dropped it on a parquet floor. It died in the most spectacular fashion.
There was one back in 79,80. My step-dad had one. We did property management. It was great for the little things like nails and o-rings. It rolled right out to the end. But the end one was lid for the 2nd row. It lasted a long time. In fact I don't even know what happened to it. These designs brought back repairing stuff for someone
I have a huge one that I keep my spools in (thread, not filament). I assume it's a knock-off version as I've never spotted a brand name on it and it works kinda...not...good...but well enough for the occasional sewing project. It has a sliding lock on the handle that keeps it very securely shut. Correction: the sliding lock is separate, not on the handle.
I got one. They suck, I store all the little parts I am least likely to ever use in it. You have to carefully unroll and roll it up or parts spill out or get caught in the hinges. Also, since it's not clear, it's easy to forget what is even in it. Those clear plastic comparmentized boxes or those things with all the little drawers are much better.
As a 3D artist getting a 3D printer was my number 1 priority. I was blown away by the idea that I could create something digitally, then hold it in my hands a couple hours later.
You ever try working with Sculpey!? hah. I'm only kidding. I've had the dream of making something digitally and somehow magically bringing it into the physical world since I was a small child, playing the first 3D computer games in my dad's lap, long before 3D printers were a thing. It took me too long to finally get a 3D printer.
So many great prints! The rusted light switch, the useful micro lathe, and even a skittles-infused pin screen... thanks for featuring so many designers (and also me)!
My wife and I are 80s kids and wresting fans, so the punny intersection of the two in the Rock Lobster model, plus the 3d printed factor should successfully earn a full blown eyeroll, head shake and a "you're an idiot" when I put this on her desk LOL
I recently started printing Benchys en masse. I don't know why, I have such an urge to paint a collection of them. I have printed so many things with my two printers so this is great to see for all the noobs coming fresh off of the holidays. That Grock joke actually had me exhale too hard, thank you
That rolling storage box just jogged my memory, I had one when I was a kid except it rolled all the way in like a spiral. As far as my bad memory lets me recall, it was kinda finnicky to use but it worked. Good for holding little things.
Hint on the tall narrow prints - very wide brim. I'm talkin' 30+ wide, but basically make it so the base is at least 1/3 to 1/2 or even more as wide as the model, so it has a much higher resistance to failure late in the print. Also make sure the squish on the first layer is decent so it adheres really well and the bed temp is on the higher end of the spread.
I've made it through some tall spires such as a trophy where a brim would have not helped as the base was already printed below. I added some painted on supports and the tree supports braced the spires so they didn't flop back and forth too much
Coming from someone who’s a complete noob in video making, the amount of time put into each of your videos must be tremendous. Been binge watching for hours and just subscribed. Thanks so much for the amazing content, great ideas and new extensions to my vocabulary. I appreciate you!
10:21 yea but your humor is top notch above anyone elses making videos about 3d printers. i dont even own a 3d printer and i have watched A LOT of your videos in the last month. your one of my favorite channels.
My first project (I'm talking stuff I made in Fusion 360 for the printer I got a couple weeks ago) was curtain gliders, because the curtains my sister didn't need anymore had glider bits that didn't fit the tracks in my flat. Though while replacing the glider bits I noticed that the ... er, hanger bits? ..., well, quite a few of them had damaged hooks, so in a few places the curtains have detached from the gliders. Now I might need to remake the hook thingies too. Or I'll try to replace my broken bike lamp enclosure.
I've wondered about using magnets as clamps on those tallish prints that are prone to getting knocked loose (pause the print after it gets tall enough for the nozzle to clear the magnet clamps). If using a spring steel PEI coated sheet, there should be something to clamp to, but I'm not sure how a magnet on top will interact with the magnet on the table sheet.
That rolly thing you used to be able to buy. It was an "as seen on tv" thing called the rolly kit. I have one. Its pretty cool, but is kinda a pain to use, since you need to carefully unroll the entire thing if ya need a part in the last container. Also better remember every single item you stored in it, or you end up wasting a bunch of time looking for it.
Recently found your channel and I just gotta say I absolutely love your script writing. Your comedy is great and understated and the little alliteration jokes always get me. I'm a fellow Dever-ette as well, if I ever see ya at Microcenter I'll say hi :)
My favorite key hanger isn't printed at all, but is just a standard ethernet biscuit jack mounted to the wall. I made a few loopbacks that double as keychains and they plug right in (and the loopbacks are functional and handy to have in my profession)
@@Hawk7886 I have an old hub on the wall at work for that purpose. Plus the hub can be handy in a pinch for easy port replication for wireshark and whatnot.
Hi Zack, i really appreciate your wide range videos and learn a lot from them, so go ahead with the good work! I saw in the beginning of the video that you have an Anycubic printer. I bought a Anycubic Kobra Go and been experimenting and watching lots of videos to finally get the print quality i am looking for. Can i ask which slicer you use and if you used the pre defined configurations which come with the printer for the slicing software or if you have tweaked the configuration. I struggle espacially with tolerance issues and the fact that even if the print starts well at some point the first layer somehow melts together and therefore functional parts don't work anymore and this is really frustrating because i tried a lot and wasted already a lot filament. Hope you can give me some advise.
I have a SLA printer with a tiny print area (as SLA often has), and I'm glad to see most of these are fine for tiny areas like mine! Definitely going to print many rocks
PSA for newbies! Almost none of these are viable on resin printers. Printing mechanisms on resin is completely different due to the difference in material properties. Print-in-place *can* work with heavy custom supports, but if it's gotta be springy, durable, or have tight tolerances, use an FDM printer.
I do not own a 3D printer, nor am I in the market to get one, but the algorithm recommended this channel, and the comedy, editing, and content are so good that I had to stay. Even the Patreon names are a delight.
Thank you! I put a lot of work into making my videos fun to watch, even to folks who'd never use the material. That's how we get out of our comfort zones, right?
I sure as heck would print those light switches if they were the same style here over the pond. But some of them certainly will go on my list of stuff to print at some point in the future.
That! (6:00) I found want I want for one of my first prints! I want to make that container with the retractable lid you showed as en example of printing interlocking parts. Do you have a link for that?
You are literally the only creator I’ve subscribed to whose every video I’ve watched that I will go the one extra step and like the video. You sir are epic! Keep it up!
Printing it on a raft could help, but it’s just going to be a challenging print. If your supports are good, you could try turning them a few degrees and printing the whole length with supports.
Something that really helps with prints that tend to lose adhesion is Aquanet hair spray. It goes on as a fine mist so you get a nice thin adhesive layer but it's considerably more aggressive than kiddie glue stick. Cleans up with water when you need to have it gone. I print much tougher stuff than those nunchuku and since I started using it, I haven't had one spaghetti failure.
Hey Zack! What do you think of the Anycubic Vyper? I got one a few weeks ago and so far I'm very impressed by the quality and features you get for this price
Hey Zack that Rock Salad was Rock Solid! I was buffeted by laughs of the out-loud variety. I always appreciate your sense of humor and Scary Sharp Wit I've seen quite a few of your videos and .this gets my vote for funniest that I've seen so far. Thanks I needed that!
The Pin toy at 9:35 was something that I always wanted to have, now I can make my own. Though I have to fix my elephants foot problem first or raft all of them.
I gotta admit. I was not expecting this level of entertainment from this kind of video. Dude, you are very clever, funny, and a showman. Subbed. Your “spaghetti” and The Rock bits… Gold 🤌
Can anyone tell me what the translucent green material is called, or what that color is called? I've loved it my whole life! You can see it at 8:04 < that one! (Also possibly similar? 11:28) But the one with the Rock's face that is see through is so pretty! I would actually love to make a something with that, and I'd love to know how to find that material or make it, or even just what the color is. 8:04 that one! - It looks remarkably close to some pretty expensive gemstones. Awesome video by the way, legitimately some really cool stuff here. I can't wait to get into 3D Printing again.
hi everyone i just got my 1st 3d printer and i don't know how to design things, i am using onshape but i find it very difficult to make complex shapes and i was wondering if someone could give me any advice on what software should i use and slicer, tanks
Anything that helps you get consistent outer perimeters and reduce stringing will help! But for a foolproof print, use a tough filament that doesn't snap easily so even if the mechanism jams up, you can snap it loose without busting your print!
The prusa slicer for example works with 3MF, STL and OBJ (and AMF, but that's not recommended). Can probably vary, but I only worked with Prusa before.
I've had mine for about a year and I'm finally joining the Sword club. I modeled the Master Sword and the Gladius from Astral Chain and plan to print them both at 1:1. I'm really excited
I’ve been watching your videos for some time, I’ve decided to jump in the water here and get a printer… I’d like to get something in the $500 range. Is this a doable price range for a starter printer? Any suggestions?
I know this video is old but seeing that Enlightened symbol on the key buckle wall organizer thing really brings me back... glad to see we were on the same side 😉
Thank you, not a first time printer but I've been stumped for Months on what to print next. I just wanted some Ideas and this is perfect. Gonna print the keys holder wall mount hanger multi-use - THANK YOU
I LOVE that light switch cover just sadly cant use it as i live in the UK and we have a diffrent setup here tho it is epic and im looking at doing that cross bow tho there is like 0 info on how to put it together and also what settings to use so im just going to YOLO it i guess
I got a 3d printer for Xmas. I'm gonna print some clips to hold a loose car part on my vehicle until I can afford to buy a proper replacement. seems smart to me. Also, it's not fully loose just wobbly. I don't condone reckless endangerment without reason.
3Dprinty does have some clever stuff. I do enjoy giving nieces and nephews gifts in their trick gift boxes and let them struggle for a good long while.
I love how when 3D printers first became a reality, people were predicting the age of the Star Trek replicator where nobody would ever have to buy anything ever again if they could just magically print it out of thin air. People would be printing furniture, cars, houses, etc. Of course ignoring the reality that the raw material for the prints has to come from somewhere and it was never going to be free. Like on The Big Theory where Howard prints "free" action figures after buying a 3D printer that costs like $40,000.
The rolling storage box is an old market failure, the Roly kit came out in 1997. I do love the idea of a small one for tiny electronics, my mother bought one in the 90's and kept sewing supplies in it till my dad dropped it on a parquet floor. It died in the most spectacular fashion.
I picked up two Rolykits second hand recently and I've been using them to store my small electronics parts. They're really good for that ^^
@@StrangeLake My dad had 2 that he used for oddball screws and bolts and such
There was one back in 79,80. My step-dad had one. We did property management. It was great for the little things like nails and o-rings. It rolled right out to the end. But the end one was lid for the 2nd row. It lasted a long time. In fact I don't even know what happened to it.
These designs brought back repairing stuff for someone
I have a huge one that I keep my spools in (thread, not filament). I assume it's a knock-off version as I've never spotted a brand name on it and it works kinda...not...good...but well enough for the occasional sewing project. It has a sliding lock on the handle that keeps it very securely shut. Correction: the sliding lock is separate, not on the handle.
I got one. They suck, I store all the little parts I am least likely to ever use in it. You have to carefully unroll and roll it up or parts spill out or get caught in the hinges. Also, since it's not clear, it's easy to forget what is even in it. Those clear plastic comparmentized boxes or those things with all the little drawers are much better.
As a 3D artist getting a 3D printer was my number 1 priority. I was blown away by the idea that I could create something digitally, then hold it in my hands a couple hours later.
As someone who wants to get into 3d modeling and a total noob, any advice? Its a bit hard to know what to start on
@@JeremyKnab will do thanks for the advice! :)
You ever try working with Sculpey!? hah.
I'm only kidding. I've had the dream of making something digitally and somehow magically bringing it into the physical world since I was a small child, playing the first 3D computer games in my dad's lap, long before 3D printers were a thing. It took me too long to finally get a 3D printer.
yep that's the goal
A couple hours later? They must be small! 😂
So many great prints! The rusted light switch, the useful micro lathe, and even a skittles-infused pin screen... thanks for featuring so many designers (and also me)!
Not just you … you twice! Love your work and great seeing your designs here today.
Awesome when I see two of my favorite channels together.
Dudhdhd
Now that is some fine printing projects! Imma need a rock 🦞
No I don't actually. Also, thats one "m" too many.
My wife and I are 80s kids and wresting fans, so the punny intersection of the two in the Rock Lobster model, plus the 3d printed factor should successfully earn a full blown eyeroll, head shake and a "you're an idiot" when I put this on her desk LOL
@@critter42 wondering how many get the Rocklobster reference 😂🤣
@@UncleJessy The look on her face when she put two & two together was TOTALLY worth it 🤣🤣🤣
I think he needs some Jesse pla
I recently started printing Benchys en masse. I don't know why, I have such an urge to paint a collection of them. I have printed so many things with my two printers so this is great to see for all the noobs coming fresh off of the holidays.
That Grock joke actually had me exhale too hard, thank you
I had the same boat problem I recently bought a filament sample pack for just boats
I did rubber ducks.
That rolling storage box just jogged my memory, I had one when I was a kid except it rolled all the way in like a spiral. As far as my bad memory lets me recall, it was kinda finnicky to use but it worked. Good for holding little things.
Me too 😆
I’ve had my printer for two years now and found more things to print here! Hell yeah!
Hint on the tall narrow prints - very wide brim. I'm talkin' 30+ wide, but basically make it so the base is at least 1/3 to 1/2 or even more as wide as the model, so it has a much higher resistance to failure late in the print. Also make sure the squish on the first layer is decent so it adheres really well and the bed temp is on the higher end of the spread.
I've made it through some tall spires such as a trophy where a brim would have not helped as the base was already printed below. I added some painted on supports and the tree supports braced the spires so they didn't flop back and forth too much
wow haven't seen the Enlightened logo in years, cool keychain.
I was thinking the same thing
I came to the comments for this lol are people still playing? Have we unlocked everyone's minds yet?
Holy Jarvis!
"Sucks to be you because you'll never experience a Discovery Zone". Aaaannnd you've earned my subscription.
Coming from someone who’s a complete noob in video making, the amount of time put into each of your videos must be tremendous. Been binge watching for hours and just subscribed. Thanks so much for the amazing content, great ideas and new extensions to my vocabulary. I appreciate you!
Coming from someone who isn't... nope.
10:21 yea but your humor is top notch above anyone elses making videos about 3d printers. i dont even own a 3d printer and i have watched A LOT of your videos in the last month. your one of my favorite channels.
That light switch would be great for service dogs! Mine hates to turn on and off regular light switches because they are so tiny and fiddly for him.
My first project (I'm talking stuff I made in Fusion 360 for the printer I got a couple weeks ago) was curtain gliders, because the curtains my sister didn't need anymore had glider bits that didn't fit the tracks in my flat. Though while replacing the glider bits I noticed that the ... er, hanger bits? ..., well, quite a few of them had damaged hooks, so in a few places the curtains have detached from the gliders. Now I might need to remake the hook thingies too.
Or I'll try to replace my broken bike lamp enclosure.
I've wondered about using magnets as clamps on those tallish prints that are prone to getting knocked loose (pause the print after it gets tall enough for the nozzle to clear the magnet clamps). If using a spring steel PEI coated sheet, there should be something to clamp to, but I'm not sure how a magnet on top will interact with the magnet on the table sheet.
Thanks!
That rolly thing you used to be able to buy. It was an "as seen on tv" thing called the rolly kit. I have one. Its pretty cool, but is kinda a pain to use, since you need to carefully unroll the entire thing if ya need a part in the last container. Also better remember every single item you stored in it, or you end up wasting a bunch of time looking for it.
Recently found your channel and I just gotta say I absolutely love your script writing. Your comedy is great and understated and the little alliteration jokes always get me. I'm a fellow Dever-ette as well, if I ever see ya at Microcenter I'll say hi :)
I actually just printed electrosync’s buckle! Didn’t even realize it can be used like that!
Is there a list of the filaments you used? I love all the colors.
My favorite key hanger isn't printed at all, but is just a standard ethernet biscuit jack mounted to the wall. I made a few loopbacks that double as keychains and they plug right in (and the loopbacks are functional and handy to have in my profession)
I love this idea. A dead network switch would be an easy way to keep a bunch of them together.
@@Hawk7886 I have an old hub on the wall at work for that purpose. Plus the hub can be handy in a pinch for easy port replication for wireshark and whatnot.
Hi Zack,
i really appreciate your wide range videos and learn a lot from them, so go ahead with the good work!
I saw in the beginning of the video that you have an Anycubic printer. I bought a Anycubic Kobra Go and been experimenting and watching lots of videos to finally get the print quality i am looking for. Can i ask which slicer you use and if you used the pre defined configurations which come with the printer for the slicing software or if you have tweaked the configuration.
I struggle espacially with tolerance issues and the fact that even if the print starts well at some point the first layer somehow melts together and therefore functional parts don't work anymore and this is really frustrating because i tried a lot and wasted already a lot filament.
Hope you can give me some advise.
I have a SLA printer with a tiny print area (as SLA often has), and I'm glad to see most of these are fine for tiny areas like mine! Definitely going to print many rocks
Resinhuffer
Had my printer for a couple years now, never seen these, thanks for the print ideas Zack!
PSA for newbies! Almost none of these are viable on resin printers. Printing mechanisms on resin is completely different due to the difference in material properties. Print-in-place *can* work with heavy custom supports, but if it's gotta be springy, durable, or have tight tolerances, use an FDM printer.
HeyZack, do you style your hair to purposely make it looks like a failed print? (6:46)
It takes work. It naturally wants to look like a boat.
I'm so glad someone resurrected rolykit storage. I need it for my D&D minis.
So glad you featured 3dprinty!! He has absolutely great content and not enough recognition!!
Not naming the gun Dwayne the Glock Johnson was a great opportunity missed.
I do not own a 3D printer, nor am I in the market to get one, but the algorithm recommended this channel, and the comedy, editing, and content are so good that I had to stay. Even the Patreon names are a delight.
Thank you! I put a lot of work into making my videos fun to watch, even to folks who'd never use the material. That's how we get out of our comfort zones, right?
i always wanted one of them rolly things back in the day, guess ill just print one since its the future.
Love how honest you are about showing shots of working prints from the creator!
You are the most entertaining dude ever !! I love watching your vids. Keep them coming. Cheers mate
I'm looking to get a 3d printer soon, can all these things (and similar projects) be created with resin printers?
I sure as heck would print those light switches if they were the same style here over the pond.
But some of them certainly will go on my list of stuff to print at some point in the future.
That! (6:00) I found want I want for one of my first prints! I want to make that container with the retractable lid you showed as en example of printing interlocking parts. Do you have a link for that?
That is cool!
Its called an Iris Box.
Love the video Zack! Been there with fails too!
OMG the America School system! You have the best puns and jokes in your videos sir! Love those prints!
I wonder if you could've printed the nunchucks with a much wider brim or raft or with better adhesives on the bed.
me who actually 3d printed guns
A fellow man of culture I see.
You are literally the only creator I’ve subscribed to whose every video I’ve watched that I will go the one extra step and like the video. You sir are epic! Keep it up!
Everyone: "We must stop polluting the earth with plastic!"
Also everyone: "Haha useless 3d printed plastic widgets go brrrrrrrr."
PLA is made out of plants and is bio degradable in industrial recycling
How do we see the results of the last video you uploaded? The glasses one? I can't see the stream on Twitch, or on your YT page?
Love the videos keep the good work up
How did you make the rubber band string for the crossbow?
0:18 who wants to know, cause as far as the ATF knows everything firearm related was lost in a boating accident
It fell off a truck that fell off a larger truck-trucking truck.
Hey! For the steampunk lightswitch. Is there a version of that print that would work for flat lightswitches instead of the lever ones?
3D Printy is massively underrated. Glad you had a shout out to his channel
@Zack Freedman For the nunchucks is it possible to stabilize the grips as they get taller to prevent the failure?
Printing it on a raft could help, but it’s just going to be a challenging print. If your supports are good, you could try turning them a few degrees and printing the whole length with supports.
@@ZackFreedman Did you consider printing on a raft?
Something that really helps with prints that tend to lose adhesion is Aquanet hair spray.
It goes on as a fine mist so you get a nice thin adhesive layer but it's considerably more aggressive than kiddie glue stick. Cleans up with water when you need to have it gone.
I print much tougher stuff than those nunchuku and since I started using it, I haven't had one spaghetti failure.
Or masking tape if you dont have a heated print bed.
How is the vyper compared to prusa? Thank you
8:18 oh no he didn't
Ah the good ol Discovery Zone. Love the reference. New to printing. Thanks for all the content to gravitate to.
Sorry about that generic-arse title ;) Great vid!
Hey Zack! What do you think of the Anycubic Vyper?
I got one a few weeks ago and so far I'm very impressed by the quality and features you get for this price
Does print in place work with resin printers as well?
Is there a switch for these wide rocker switches?
Unlocking endless possibilities with 3D printing technology!
Hey Zack that Rock Salad was Rock Solid! I was buffeted by laughs of the out-loud variety. I always appreciate your sense of humor and Scary Sharp Wit I've seen quite a few of your videos and .this gets my vote for funniest that I've seen so far. Thanks I needed that!
As someone completely new to the hobby... how would you make the nun chucks work? or is this a dead on arrival type scenario?
I loved the Shoop Da Whoop from the laser collection. Dominic Fera really left a mark on us all
The Pin toy at 9:35 was something that I always wanted to have, now I can make my own. Though I have to fix my elephants foot problem first or raft all of them.
I gotta admit. I was not expecting this level of entertainment from this kind of video. Dude, you are very clever, funny, and a showman. Subbed.
Your “spaghetti” and The Rock bits… Gold 🤌
hey was that an ENL key ring at 2:48 ?
Does it cost money when you print something on Cura?
All my red filaments dont come out nearly that red, any idea on what brand?
12:26 it's so cool that Turbo made a cameo in this video!
What beginner printer do you recommend? (also maybe on the cheaper end, im broke lol)
Get a prusa, best printers and cheap.
@@keystonefreebordcrew1482 kinda expensive... hows the Original Prusa MINI+?
does anyone know what the print at 6:00 was? or have a link for it? thx
What is the Filament for the light switch?
You are endlessly amusing.... I often find myself laughing out loud while watching your videos. Thanks for the time that you put into these videos....
~5:30 Nice way to work liluputian into a conversation. A criminally underused word in my opinion.
Can anyone tell me what the translucent green material is called, or what that color is called? I've loved it my whole life! You can see it at 8:04 < that one! (Also possibly similar? 11:28)
But the one with the Rock's face that is see through is so pretty! I would actually love to make a something with that, and I'd love to know how to find that material or make it, or even just what the color is. 8:04 that one! - It looks remarkably close to some pretty expensive gemstones.
Awesome video by the way, legitimately some really cool stuff here. I can't wait to get into 3D Printing again.
Also looks a lot like the Pokemon Emerald GBA cartridge!
That reading of the names at end made this a so much better find!! Love it! you got a follower.
hi everyone i just got my 1st 3d printer and i don't know how to design things, i am using onshape but i find it very difficult to make complex shapes and i was wondering if someone could give me any advice on what software should i use and slicer, tanks
I love this. Happy 2022 zack!!!
Dude, your writing and delivery are on point. Thank you.
7:32 is such a random reference for a 3D printing video and I’m here for it.
what are some tips and tricks on printing "print in place"?
Anything that helps you get consistent outer perimeters and reduce stringing will help! But for a foolproof print, use a tough filament that doesn't snap easily so even if the mechanism jams up, you can snap it loose without busting your print!
Could you do a video on a starter ..first 3d printer..thats cheap..and smaller...a few models... i have no idea where to start.
Hello, I saw in ,your videos, many 3d print stuff. So i ask you, can i use BLENDER to make my own thinks and Print it?
I don't know, but check the kinds of files that blender can export and see if a slicer from the 3D printer can import it.
The prusa slicer for example works with 3MF, STL and OBJ (and AMF, but that's not recommended). Can probably vary, but I only worked with Prusa before.
Thx
I've had mine for about a year and I'm finally joining the Sword club. I modeled the Master Sword and the Gladius from Astral Chain and plan to print them both at 1:1. I'm really excited
How to build the hand crossbow?
This is one of my favorite videos I've ever watched
Liked your gadgets. Have you done a video on your printers or your recommended printer.
Your content is always a great reset for me. Thank you 🙏
Will these work with resin?
I’ve been watching your videos for some time, I’ve decided to jump in the water here and get a printer…
I’d like to get something in the $500 range. Is this a doable price range for a starter printer? Any suggestions?
I know this video is old but seeing that Enlightened symbol on the key buckle wall organizer thing really brings me back... glad to see we were on the same side 😉
Thank you, not a first time printer but I've been stumped for Months on what to print next. I just wanted some Ideas and this is perfect. Gonna print the keys holder wall mount hanger multi-use - THANK YOU
12:08 I mean Idk if you were trolling or not but that thing came out in the 90s and sold for like $19.99
How do I enter? I've got my print done but I cant figure out where on the site Im supposed to upload it to.
The contest link is in the video description! It's an unofficial contest that I'm doing myself, so Thangs isn't hosting it
Lol “I’m a cocktail guy” haha me too and now I’ve got to try that peanut butter beer 🤣
I LOVE that light switch cover just sadly cant use it as i live in the UK and we have a diffrent setup here tho it is epic and im looking at doing that cross bow tho there is like 0 info on how to put it together and also what settings to use so im just going to YOLO it i guess
I got a 3d printer for Xmas. I'm gonna print some clips to hold a loose car part on my vehicle until I can afford to buy a proper replacement. seems smart to me. Also, it's not fully loose just wobbly. I don't condone reckless endangerment without reason.
Love your works! So cool and so funny😍😍😍
Thanks! I wasn't sure what I was gonna do with this thing, but now I can show all these prints to my wife's boyfriend!
my grandma had bought that roll up storage box back in the 90's. It was called the rolykit
3Dprinty does have some clever stuff. I do enjoy giving nieces and nephews gifts in their trick gift boxes and let them struggle for a good long while.
i did not expect a guilty gear reference but i must applaude
I love how when 3D printers first became a reality, people were predicting the age of the Star Trek replicator where nobody would ever have to buy anything ever again if they could just magically print it out of thin air. People would be printing furniture, cars, houses, etc. Of course ignoring the reality that the raw material for the prints has to come from somewhere and it was never going to be free. Like on The Big Theory where Howard prints "free" action figures after buying a 3D printer that costs like $40,000.