It has its uses, but it also has its drawbacks. Anything taller than the distance from the tip of your nozzle to the next largest piece (typically the heat block) requires lots of extra space to prevent the print head from crashing into the existing parts, for one.
I always keep filament scraps around (I literally have a box of them) for pins (hinge pins, melt-in-place "rivets" etc), doesn't matter much if they absorb some ambient moisture since they're mostly for alignment, fixing things together, etc. Very useful.
1. Magnetic fridge push pin (add your magnet) 2. 12oz Coke can slide lid cover to prevent bees 🐝 from getting in 3. Golf tees 4.tiny fidgets 5.ar15 frame tensioners inserts 6.rings jewelry ish 7.lego brick keychain 8.marbles for marble run machines 9.darts for blow darts 🎯 10.book marks in single color semi shallow/skeletonized 11.folding or non folding phone stand 12. Spinning top 13. Guitar pick 14. Single fidget clicker button 15. Croc 🐊 charms 16. Tiny cord organizers 17. Leaping print in place push frog 🐸 Just a few of the top of my head
I like to print blades for my scraper. I'm more likely to swap to a new blade sooner when I have way more blades than I need. Just makes things easier.
Got a 3d-pen for my leftovers (now mainly my kids use it) And a filament connector (simple ceramic magnetic one you have to use a lighter to melt the filament) to connect them to longer strains for prints that don't need a specific color or look better that way
From maker world i like: - Nano Screwdriwer Handle for Plankton and fun - Spudger Set (Electronic Disassembly Tools) - TUBknife - a triangular utility blade holder
omg I already printed out that zipper pull and will have to pront two more soon, because my sport bag has such cheap pulls that they just break 😂. Printed it in PLA and glued it with hot glue and until now it holds up great after like 4 Months at Temps from 3°C to 53°C
Recently I have found myself printing a lot of functional items that when in use aren't actually seen, such as speaker mounts, spacers, etc. If I know it wont be seen when in use, i will use all my scrap filament and load it into my ams. when 1 roll runs out, I slap in the next until the print is finally done. I have speaker mounts in my car that are 4 or even 5 different colors, but they still work perfect.
A few really good options in here I might find a use for. Thankfully, to date, the AMS has saved me having to make such decisions. I just let it finish one roll then start feeding in the next one automatically without even needing my input. And I have been keeping at least one of each RFID core as I finish the rolls just in case I wanna put something else similar in colour and type onto a roll and lie to the machine about what it is. Haven't done so just yet, but I've got them if I do decide to.
@diablo2haveskill809 you know with all of the chemicals and lead and whatnot that I ingested over the course of my childhood decades ago I don't think there's much help that can be sent my way at this point. LOL
Its not the fact that its plastic that is the problem. PLA itself (not counting any special additives some brands might use) isn't toxic. Its the layer lines on 3D prints that make it nearly impossible to clean. Those ridges in the layers hold onto bateria and will rapidly grow after a single use and give you a very real chance of getting sick from using it again. Thus his single use comment in the video. While the other plastics you used weren't the best thing to be using in the world, they were actually food rated and were more or less safe.
@@ZeorGaming so I appreciate your attempt at clarification, and unfortunately for me very often my tone doesn't come across when I'm replying to comments. But just to be clear, I understand the porous nature of 3D printed material can allow for bacterial growth,. But seeing as how I use wooden cutting boards and have used metal utensils with plastic mixing bowls and whatnot I'm not super afraid of that either especially since I habitually use white vinegar and or starsan to clean porous stuff in my kitchen anyway to good effect. My comment was really meant to be tongue-in-cheek referring to having done things like microwave food in non bpa-free plastic and whatnot. My goal was really just a quick simple laugh at the old guy and not to imply I disagreed with being careful around 3D printed Kitchen products
Swatches are usually the first thing I print with a new roll, but I've been using up my scraps with filament clips for a while and I'm just about to run out. Luckily I have a bunch of nearly empty spools waiting to be used up so the timing works out perfectly.
Keeping it meta, a bed scraper so you get you print off the bed without scratching the PEI/G10/whatever layer. Works for pretty much any filament except that last scrap of TPU-which becomes hose washers or non-skid pads for other 3D printed stuff.
My smallest functional print was also my most valuable. 0.12g for the part itself, but about double that in actual filament used because of the purge line and supports. Was to fix a tiny hose nipple that broke off in an $800 CPAP machine that would otherwise have been thrown away.
I'm definitely going to try those swatches out. I just bought a bunch of fancy filaments for Christmas presents, and wanted to make a few. I didn't really like the plain flat swatches, since most of the stuff I bought has different optical goodness at different angles and depths, so this is really perfect timing
I honestly don't understand why the end of spool seems to be so problematic for people. It's not like filament is hard to swap out during a print with a direct drive. If a model will be painted i don't care about the base color so I'll just use up rolls as i can swap out as they run out. Otherwise i just use them for small prints, calibration tests, first layer tests etc. But I do need to confirm... do people actually WAIT until they finish a roll before they buy 10 new rolls of filament? I didn't know that waiting was required.
I have an idea. What about putting the bits of filament in a vacuum bag and suck all the air out and store. No moisture will ruin the bits. And then later, you can splice several bits together. Viola 👍🥰
0:05 No. I switched over to eSun re-fills. So i just been using my same spools over and over. Less cost and less waste (saves about 6 euro per spool, not bad I'd say).
Thanks for the vid, a lot of cool uses for odds and ends :) Looks like you are printing a lot of this on your bambu ... try changing wall to infill to 20%, that should remove the small holes near your perimeter.
I usually just put the last meter filament into small test print or just use it with new roll of same color when possible. Other than that i also sometime use it to print bases for my minis or connector for terrain. Also some tokens or coins to gradually replace cardboard one in my boardgames or just blank circle and square tokens to use when making my pnp boardgame set
If you have 2 metres of filament left and it’s not a filament that’s documented on the Filament Library, they accept donations. It’s an awesome site where they print a swatch, capture a picture in high res and document it. We have more than a few filaments not listed there, so we’re planning to send some in. ☺️
My wife and I have a bunch of Lego sets that she had previously built and taken apart when we moved... so pieces here and there have gone missing; I will definitely need to print some when we rebuild the sets at our next place lol
I’m not sure if you changed anything, but the audio is super clean and clear on this video. Either way, great video! I’ve always measured in grams. Is there a benefit to measuring in meters? I heard you mention a meter for a bin, and didn’t know anyone who measured in meters. Thanks!
...or, just throw it in the recycling. I already toss supports and bird's nests of failed prints. I see no need to hang onto tail-ends and non-reusable spools. If you re-order the same filaments often, you can just let the runout sensor trip and load the new roll, for those without AMS units.
I guess my only real complaint about the spool splitter is that you have to be very careful to use only one filament at a time from each split spool, because filaments that are sharing the same spool won't be able to unspool independently of each other. So if you have a last-meters print you want to print, and you just so happen to want to print it with filaments that share the same split spool, you're kinda SOL unless that last-meters print is one in which you can pause and manually change filaments out at the right layer.
Woho, made it into the video 2:16 😁 I didn't wanna be mean with that comment 😉Thanks a lot for sharing these models to everyone here and for your work!
YES!!! That's exactly his name (Steve Miley) so many people have recommended highly about him and am just starting with him from Brisbane Australia...🇦🇺
Join on you should make a video about this topic earlier because it’s so relevant specially, the software that helps you print individual objects does walk with bamboo lab slicer or when is a way to use orca slicer on bamboo lab plants
3D printed Lego? Missed opportunity for #PrintABlok from the 3D Printing Professor! They are a fantastic last meter print as you can throw a bunch of the connector pieces onto the build plate, and you can never have too many connectors! Don't worry, I can offer a refresher on them when I see you at #SMRRF 😁 I shall be hosting the #Recreator3D table once again ❤
Do you have any recommendations for having writing with a different filiment color on prints if your printer doesn’t support multiple spools with one print
When explaining the new (to me) feature "Complete individual objects", you went waaaay too fast. I had to watch that clip a half a dozen times to try and capture the few milliseconds where you showed where that setting was - very frustrating. I know and use this feature in Bambu Studio, but didn't know Prusa Slicer also had it.
If anything, the 'print each object separately' setting is definitely a great discovery for me.
Will definitely try this next time.
It has its uses, but it also has its drawbacks. Anything taller than the distance from the tip of your nozzle to the next largest piece (typically the heat block) requires lots of extra space to prevent the print head from crashing into the existing parts, for one.
I always keep filament scraps around (I literally have a box of them) for pins (hinge pins, melt-in-place "rivets" etc), doesn't matter much if they absorb some ambient moisture since they're mostly for alignment, fixing things together, etc. Very useful.
1. Magnetic fridge push pin (add your magnet)
2. 12oz Coke can slide lid cover to prevent bees 🐝 from getting in
3. Golf tees
4.tiny fidgets
5.ar15 frame tensioners inserts
6.rings jewelry ish
7.lego brick keychain
8.marbles for marble run machines
9.darts for blow darts 🎯
10.book marks in single color semi shallow/skeletonized
11.folding or non folding phone stand
12. Spinning top
13. Guitar pick
14. Single fidget clicker button
15. Croc 🐊 charms
16. Tiny cord organizers
17. Leaping print in place push frog 🐸
Just a few of the top of my head
One of the features of my new printer that i like best is the ability to auto-pause the print, load new filament and continue seamlessly.
Bambu Labs?
That is nothing special, just requires a filament runout sensor. Pretty common.
@@Vortex-gz8se Nobody said it was special, just that they liked it. :)
Be careful with it since the one color on two different spools could differ a bit, and it would be visible in your print
I like to print blades for my scraper. I'm more likely to swap to a new blade sooner when I have way more blades than I need. Just makes things easier.
This is the best of these kind of videos I've seen. No random junk and those collar stays are a game changer!
Got a 3d-pen for my leftovers (now mainly my kids use it)
And a filament connector (simple ceramic magnetic one you have to use a lighter to melt the filament) to connect them to longer strains for prints that don't need a specific color or look better that way
The spool divider is genius!! Great for scraps and samples. This is going on my TBP list
From maker world i like:
- Nano Screwdriwer Handle for Plankton and fun
- Spudger Set (Electronic Disassembly Tools)
- TUBknife - a triangular utility blade holder
omg I already printed out that zipper pull and will have to pront two more soon, because my sport bag has such cheap pulls that they just break 😂. Printed it in PLA and glued it with hot glue and until now it holds up great after like 4 Months at Temps from 3°C to 53°C
Recently I have found myself printing a lot of functional items that when in use aren't actually seen, such as speaker mounts, spacers, etc. If I know it wont be seen when in use, i will use all my scrap filament and load it into my ams. when 1 roll runs out, I slap in the next until the print is finally done. I have speaker mounts in my car that are 4 or even 5 different colors, but they still work perfect.
A few really good options in here I might find a use for. Thankfully, to date, the AMS has saved me having to make such decisions. I just let it finish one roll then start feeding in the next one automatically without even needing my input. And I have been keeping at least one of each RFID core as I finish the rolls just in case I wanna put something else similar in colour and type onto a roll and lie to the machine about what it is. Haven't done so just yet, but I've got them if I do decide to.
You know the Whole Foods safe pla thing always makes me laugh, considering the kinds of plastic I microwaved and ate out of as a child.
You need help man......
@diablo2haveskill809 you know with all of the chemicals and lead and whatnot that I ingested over the course of my childhood decades ago I don't think there's much help that can be sent my way at this point. LOL
Its not the fact that its plastic that is the problem. PLA itself (not counting any special additives some brands might use) isn't toxic. Its the layer lines on 3D prints that make it nearly impossible to clean. Those ridges in the layers hold onto bateria and will rapidly grow after a single use and give you a very real chance of getting sick from using it again. Thus his single use comment in the video.
While the other plastics you used weren't the best thing to be using in the world, they were actually food rated and were more or less safe.
@@ZeorGaming so I appreciate your attempt at clarification, and unfortunately for me very often my tone doesn't come across when I'm replying to comments. But just to be clear, I understand the porous nature of 3D printed material can allow for bacterial growth,. But seeing as how I use wooden cutting boards and have used metal utensils with plastic mixing bowls and whatnot I'm not super afraid of that either especially since I habitually use white vinegar and or starsan to clean porous stuff in my kitchen anyway to good effect.
My comment was really meant to be tongue-in-cheek referring to having done things like microwave food in non bpa-free plastic and whatnot. My goal was really just a quick simple laugh at the old guy and not to imply I disagreed with being careful around 3D printed Kitchen products
I probably have lung cancer from the amount of abs smoke I've inhaled
0:41 heads up that you may need to measure and set extruder radius and z clearance, in addition to enabling sequential print
Honestly, I've never thought about printing a zip tie using 3D printing. How well do they work?
This is not only one of your best "best of or best way" videos but I really laughed at your commentary. Great stuff!!
Swatches are usually the first thing I print with a new roll, but I've been using up my scraps with filament clips for a while and I'm just about to run out. Luckily I have a bunch of nearly empty spools waiting to be used up so the timing works out perfectly.
Keeping it meta, a bed scraper so you get you print off the bed without scratching the PEI/G10/whatever layer. Works for pretty much any filament except that last scrap of TPU-which becomes hose washers or non-skid pads for other 3D printed stuff.
My smallest functional print was also my most valuable. 0.12g for the part itself, but about double that in actual filament used because of the purge line and supports. Was to fix a tiny hose nipple that broke off in an $800 CPAP machine that would otherwise have been thrown away.
Next video: best storage / display system for benchies: 8, 24, then stackable, gridfinity and that hex-wall-thing compatible.
I'm definitely going to try those swatches out. I just bought a bunch of fancy filaments for Christmas presents, and wanted to make a few. I didn't really like the plain flat swatches, since most of the stuff I bought has different optical goodness at different angles and depths, so this is really perfect timing
My spoolholder is designed to hold Benchys and temp towers, or whatever test print you want.
I honestly don't understand why the end of spool seems to be so problematic for people. It's not like filament is hard to swap out during a print with a direct drive. If a model will be painted i don't care about the base color so I'll just use up rolls as i can swap out as they run out. Otherwise i just use them for small prints, calibration tests, first layer tests etc.
But I do need to confirm... do people actually WAIT until they finish a roll before they buy 10 new rolls of filament? I didn't know that waiting was required.
definitely going to look into the zip ties and swatches
Whistles are a great way to use up your last bit of filament and are great for coaching your kid's sports teams or also just annoying your neighbor.
At 2:26 you didn't blur the tire valve stem cover. Wanted to point it out in case that was overlooked since you blurred it later in the video
@@reynardjon15 I think it was supposed to be blurred 😂
I was just researching laser marking and learned about UV lasers. They mark plastics really well without melting them!
Add on stackable painting pyramids as a quick last meter print. :)
i like the idea print a benchy with every filament, that is great!
Really looking forward to the multiboard video. It’s something I really wanna try but haven’t pulled the trigger on yet.
That SpoolSplitter thing is actually pretty ingenious, I'd never have thought of that
Guess I gotta go buy Bambu spools now
You can print them😉
I have an idea. What about putting the bits of filament in a vacuum bag and suck all the air out and store. No moisture will ruin the bits.
And then later, you can splice several bits together. Viola 👍🥰
0:05 No. I switched over to eSun re-fills. So i just been using my same spools over and over. Less cost and less waste (saves about 6 euro per spool, not bad I'd say).
Thanks for the vid, a lot of cool uses for odds and ends :) Looks like you are printing a lot of this on your bambu ... try changing wall to infill to 20%, that should remove the small holes near your perimeter.
Great video. Thanks for sharing as someone new to 3D Printing this will be very helpful.
I love this idea, thank you for the video
I usually just put the last meter filament into small test print or just use it with new roll of same color when possible. Other than that i also sometime use it to print bases for my minis or connector for terrain. Also some tokens or coins to gradually replace cardboard one in my boardgames or just blank circle and square tokens to use when making my pnp boardgame set
Honestly, time to clean up my filament rack.....Thanks for this these are great
If you have 2 metres of filament left and it’s not a filament that’s documented on the Filament Library, they accept donations. It’s an awesome site where they print a swatch, capture a picture in high res and document it. We have more than a few filaments not listed there, so we’re planning to send some in. ☺️
I love Hitchhiker's too, I love that you love it
If you have an AMS and use cardboard spools, i like printing the 8 minute trim
My wife and I have a bunch of Lego sets that she had previously built and taken apart when we moved... so pieces here and there have gone missing; I will definitely need to print some when we rebuild the sets at our next place lol
AMS, AMS Lite, Box Turtle, 8-Track Raven, ERCF, etc. Best use for last meter.
Oh I will definitely be printing lego.
There ya go bud. Engagement has been farmed
I’m not sure if you changed anything, but the audio is super clean and clear on this video. Either way, great video!
I’ve always measured in grams. Is there a benefit to measuring in meters? I heard you mention a meter for a bin, and didn’t know anyone who measured in meters. Thanks!
I love the top layer sign idea. Any information on tutorials for this? Could there be a followup tutorial video? BTW great video and ideas!!!
I mean as someone that prints a lot of prototypes/ funktional stuff I just let it run out and change roll
I save mine for my 3d pen to weld parts together
2:25 that tire valve steam cap, I was not ready for that! 🍆🫣
I'm expecting my first printer today! Very excited! 💚🇬🇧🌱
...or, just throw it in the recycling. I already toss supports and bird's nests of failed prints. I see no need to hang onto tail-ends and non-reusable spools. If you re-order the same filaments often, you can just let the runout sensor trip and load the new roll, for those without AMS units.
Hey very cool vid. Just have one gripe: The Nike logo doesnt need that much support to print
I guess my only real complaint about the spool splitter is that you have to be very careful to use only one filament at a time from each split spool, because filaments that are sharing the same spool won't be able to unspool independently of each other. So if you have a last-meters print you want to print, and you just so happen to want to print it with filaments that share the same split spool, you're kinda SOL unless that last-meters print is one in which you can pause and manually change filaments out at the right layer.
I just print my benchy on filament backup mode and i am fine :)
Will definitely be printing a few of these.
Side note: The top-down spinning b-roll shots are making me nauseous.
It’s okay I just found half a roll of old XYZ printing brand ABS on the shelf from 2014
Woho, made it into the video 2:16 😁 I didn't wanna be mean with that comment 😉Thanks a lot for sharing these models to everyone here and for your work!
I'm favoured financially with Bitcoin ETFs approval, Thank you buddy.$28,600 weekly profit regardless of how bad it gets on the economy.
YES!!! That's exactly his name (Steve Miley) so many people have recommended highly about him and am just starting with him from Brisbane Australia...🇦🇺
Steve Miley has really set the standard for others to follow, we love him in Canada🇨🇦as he has been really helpful and changed lots of life's
He's mostly on Telegrams, using the user name.
StevMiley
That's his Username ✓
Omg 😮This is the kind of information that we don't get from most UA-camrs I will get in touch with him right now
You forgot whistle 😊 its good for sports, teachers or referees, or if it comes to the worst, staying safe while out and about
Cart Coins are gonna get printed for sure, after that, maybe the swatches.
Join on you should make a video about this topic earlier because it’s so relevant specially, the software that helps you print individual objects does walk with bamboo lab slicer or when is a way to use orca slicer on bamboo lab plants
Good video. Thanks for the ideas.
I am an industrial designer from Israel. I want to come and work for you and your channel.
Instead of printing a purge tower on multi-color print systems why not print something small, but useful?
to help with the laser engraving, start with a fiber laser!
Fantastic topic for a video.
just so everybody knows Cura has a function to print one part at the time too, it's under "special mode/print sequence"
People still use Cura?
I never bothered switching personally so at least one person I guess
My favorite is to make legos outta it 🤣
Awesome video thanks
Well over 6000 hours on my X1C and Qidi iMates printers...never printed a Benchy.
3D printed Lego? Missed opportunity for #PrintABlok from the 3D Printing Professor! They are a fantastic last meter print as you can throw a bunch of the connector pieces onto the build plate, and you can never have too many connectors!
Don't worry, I can offer a refresher on them when I see you at #SMRRF 😁
I shall be hosting the #Recreator3D table once again ❤
Don't live with regret, print a benchy! I AGREE! Always benchies!
If you are buying a new spool with the same color, why not try to splice the old small pieces to the end of the new one?
Great video, i am going to print a couple of those things.
Whats the name of the song in the background if i may ask?
I just use a filament welder to stick the end of one roll onto the beginning of the next. So I never actually have this problem.
We want a K2 Plus review.
The b-roll acting was 👨🏻🍳👌🏼 😂
lol thanks
Like the new edgy style! Chefs kiss for just the right amount of pizzaz!
love your shirt
Buy one! They’re for sale ;)
Do you have any recommendations for having writing with a different filiment color on prints if your printer doesn’t support multiple spools with one print
This video makes me dizzy so much spinning
Anymore with how cheap just the balls out of the bearings are I buy them and print the rest of the bearing and they are super nice
0:06 my favorite part 🤫
Does Bambu have the Complete Individual Object Feature?
Never mind--found it!
Why didn't you show the trolleys coin in use, I have a metal trolley coin like that and it doesn't work with the sliding inserts.
doesnt bambulab also have a function to automatically switch from an empy to an full spool of the same colour? might be mistaken though.
They do
I print for years now, but I NEVER EVER have printed a benchy :-))))))))
When are we going to see Prusa Core One? =))
Working on s tool to splice filament but it'd going slow.
I respool them onto a 200g spool and save them for texts on displays I print lol
EDIT 9:23 uhhh I dont think that's tobacco😂
Eyyoooo very goood and amazingg... Well done annoying the neighbor.... Keep it up 🤣🤣
I will never ever print a benchy.
Sunlu filament connector ?
Too much expensive!
I also would use a knive and a candle.
0:32 i feel attacked
Throwing a perfectly good reusable Bambu spool into recycling? Why?
When explaining the new (to me) feature "Complete individual objects", you went waaaay too fast. I had to watch that clip a half a dozen times to try and capture the few milliseconds where you showed where that setting was - very frustrating. I know and use this feature in Bambu Studio, but didn't know Prusa Slicer also had it.
This is a better title. Last meter wasn't as clear.
So the coin things are meant to rip off the stores?
Is it just me, or does it seem that Multiboard isn't catching on?
9:04 …and gag 🤣🤣
Which filiment is not food safe
Almost none are without post processing