+Axelrd All the sounds you hear are from the 3D printer. Specifically, the stepper motors, and the stepper motors vibrating the structure of the printer itself. There is a linear correlation between the tone the motor produces, and the motor speed, and the motor speed and the feed rate as dictated by the NC code fed into the printer. From there you can create G-code that makes the motor move at the right speeds for the right length of time to produce the note you want. Multiply that by three to get harmonics, do it several thousand times for all the notes, and you're there!
RootOfEvilStudios I wouldn't be able to program that cause I don't know anythign about code, but still magnifficent job on that acomplishemnt, people use useful technoligy for some really werid creative stuff :D
+Julian Jones I'm trying to 'compose' an algorithm that fixes the point of the hot-end along a plane, though this is a lot more complex than you might expect, because here, an adjustment on one motor changes the location in all three axis. That, and the speed at which the plastic has to be extruded in order to make something is something that has to be tightly controlled, otherwise you end up with a sloppy and out of tune mess like this ua-cam.com/video/jLZ3M9QX40c/v-deo.html. That's not to say I'm not going to try anyway :P
+Matt Credland Prints astoundingly well. On average the accuracy is about 0.07mm, though with some tweaking and the right settings, getting 0.02mm bilateral tolerances is well achievable. I'm currently 3D printing a part for it which would allow dual extruders, since right now I have a few parts with overhangs that I'm having to add drafts to (and then file off) so that the material is supported.
+RootOfEvilStudios That's pretty mind-blowing. I'm really tempted to get one, but have read mixed reviews. Did you have to do much tweaking to get it going or just for the higher tolerances? Also where did you buy yours form? Yes, having a single extruder does create limitations (or work arounds and extra finishing in your case). I'd be interested to see how that works out.
Was that.. Using the sounds a 3D printing machine makes while doing certian actions to make the theme? If so, simply amazing
+Axelrd All the sounds you hear are from the 3D printer. Specifically, the stepper motors, and the stepper motors vibrating the structure of the printer itself. There is a linear correlation between the tone the motor produces, and the motor speed, and the motor speed and the feed rate as dictated by the NC code fed into the printer. From there you can create G-code that makes the motor move at the right speeds for the right length of time to produce the note you want. Multiply that by three to get harmonics, do it several thousand times for all the notes, and you're there!
RootOfEvilStudios I wouldn't be able to program that cause I don't know anythign about code, but still magnifficent job on that acomplishemnt, people use useful technoligy for some really werid creative stuff :D
+RootOfEvilStudios would it be possible to do this and make it printed something pokemon related at the same time?
+Julian Jones I'm trying to 'compose' an algorithm that fixes the point of the hot-end along a plane, though this is a lot more complex than you might expect, because here, an adjustment on one motor changes the location in all three axis. That, and the speed at which the plastic has to be extruded in order to make something is something that has to be tightly controlled, otherwise you end up with a sloppy and out of tune mess like this ua-cam.com/video/jLZ3M9QX40c/v-deo.html.
That's not to say I'm not going to try anyway :P
WHAT THE HECK that is so cool....
could you continue the blender videos? that would be fantastic 😀
Amazing!
Does it print well or did you just buy it for its musical qualities?
+Matt Credland Prints astoundingly well. On average the accuracy is about 0.07mm, though with some tweaking and the right settings, getting 0.02mm bilateral tolerances is well achievable. I'm currently 3D printing a part for it which would allow dual extruders, since right now I have a few parts with overhangs that I'm having to add drafts to (and then file off) so that the material is supported.
+RootOfEvilStudios That's pretty mind-blowing. I'm really tempted to get one, but have read mixed reviews. Did you have to do much tweaking to get it going or just for the higher tolerances? Also where did you buy yours form? Yes, having a single extruder does create limitations (or work arounds and extra finishing in your case). I'd be interested to see how that works out.
LMAO DUDE. XD
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