napkin sketch with dimensions on it I can print it out and send to you even if I can't edit that file. And yes, PETG is the correct material for holding shape when a little warm. That's what I print 90 plus percent of everything I actually plan to use out of. Very chemical resistant as well.
mat drawing will end up super complicated and would need to be accurate in may places to a few thousandths of an inch.
) learning curve. Make sure to get the latest version, or at least one that is in the 1.x series. ex-Gooserider wrote: I found it confusing to look at them unless you pick ONE creator (preferably one of the major FC dev's) and stick with just his videos....
ex-Gooserider
TriangleEnthusiast wrote:I've tried nearly every slicer, expensive simplify 3d was great, but free universal slicers have eclipsed it. I would highly recommend Orca Slicer, its based on prusaslicer but much easier to use and has a cleaner interface and has tools to really calibrate your printer well..
Williamclark77 wrote:I use Simplify 3d. Bought a lifetime license many years ago before the subscription model became the norm.
TriangleEnthusiast wrote:Klipper requires Linux-based host software, typically running on a Raspberry Pi or similar single-board computer, a Micro SD card, and the Klipper firmware itself. Users also need a web interface such as Mainsail or Fluidd, and software like the Raspberry Pi Imager for installation, along with optional tools like PuTTY and WinSCP and a 3 axis accelerometer like an adxl345). you mount the accelerometer to the print head and if the bed moves you attach it to that and then run test scripts that move them at very high speed to measure the resonance at different frequencies. The raspberry pi does the heavy lifting making calculations and sending movements to the 3d printers mainboard. This modification is extremely well documented with active discord communities and is the single most impactful modification you can make to a already functioning printer.
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