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I just did a fix using a simple 3D printed part and then thought of all the little things it helps with.

My example is  a 42 motorized unit with one of the bolt holes broken.  I was able to glue it, but if left that way it would break again.

I needed a re-enforcing piece.  I could go find the right thickness of plastic, measure and cut it out, measure and drill a hole.   Or I could do a quick simple design and print out a .4mm thick PETG piece.  15 minutes from start to piece in hand.

The plastic surface was scuffed up a little and the glue stuck both togeter well.  Thin enough not to cause an assembly problem or be noticeable after assembly.  The screw can be tightened and is functional with the re-enforcement.

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Last edited by VHubbard
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Any small plastic part that would be hard to find or, if you can find one, would mean shipping costs more than the part’s price and a few days’ wait. Durability used to be a downside, but the newer range of filaments and resins have gotten rid of many of those concerns.
Bigger projects are more fun, but the little stuff is more practical. Tool racks, trays, wheels, etc. are a good start.

I used to buy little detail items like beer kegs, pallets, boxes for loading docks, the list goes on and on. And like a previous post mentioned, these items had to be shipped for more money than they cost. You can find free stl files on the web to print a lot of stuff, almost anything. I have learned to use the free website tinkercad to design stil files for the stuff I can't find and for larger buildings, kit-bashing, custom items, etc. Everything can be a custom "one-off". Sure it takes some time, but for me it works. Neat to have items that nobody else has on my layout. I use a cheap $350 SLA printer. I print pretty much everything now. It's been a total change in how I model.

Mike

Here is my first 3D print design: a building cornice that fits all the MTH buildings with blinking signs.  Designed in TinkerCAD, and printed in PLA with a Bambu A1, painted with Rustoleum Camo.

IMG_1403IMG_1406

I thought I was going to primarily print small details and functional parts as noted in above posts, but there is a lot more that can be done.  I have no training in CAD and I had played around with a typical complex extrusion based CAD program, Design Spark.  TinkerCAD is so much easier to use and after watching a few tutorials, I was off and running.  With TinkerCAD, you are simply re-sizing, adding or subtracting geometric shapes to form your design.  The Cornice was drawn only with cubes and cylinders.

Bob

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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