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I am many things. Currently I am finishing my PhD in Chemical Engineering at UBC while also running my own company where I am designing my own products for developing countries. I also design and machine one off prototypes for the odd side job here and there when I can find time. I came from a product/transportation design background before engineering but I am starting to make the transition back as I wrap up the PhD. So in a sense, yes, I am a product designer. I realize now how much I have missed product design, so I'm trying to find a way to ride this cusp of both engineering and design backgrounds and be something pretty unique.
How about yourself? |
Thats awesome, I think Vancouver really needs more people in the product design industry so the works doesnt get pushed to europe and the US.
I come from an interaction design background. Went through the school of interactive arts and technology program as SFU and came out with a passion for both interaction design and product design. In April I started a company with 4 guys I know from SFU to bring to market the Ditto 3D printer and has been going strong in that direction ever since. |
so here is a 100 micron print shot with a macro at 1:1 and f2.8. This thing is only..3cm tall, but took an hour to print
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8443/7...7a0f760bb4.jpg Cute Octopus by Tinkerine Studio, on Flickr and with it beside a 9.2cm bigger version that didnt take that much longer at 200 microns to print http://www.tinkerines.com/wp-content...1-1024x682.jpg |
Very nice! Looks really good!
Ok, as promised... 20 micron print! Hot off the press... errr... printer. I just picked something simple and did it in translucent gold because it shows EVERY mistake. If I can make the gold look good, others are way easier. Both my camera batteries are dead so you get iphone pics :razz: ***Excuse the crazy glue on the fingers. I was re-aquascping.:razz: Here it is on the printer. No clean up needed! http://i927.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps4dfb3248.jpg In the pics you can sort of see layers, but in real life you can't see or feel them at all. http://i927.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps280d6495.jpg |
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Just buggin' ya. Looks great! |
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lol its always a work in progress. |
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The bevel gear took 3 hours to print using 20 um perimeter/40 um loops and 20% rectangular infill. I could have easily dropped that to 2 to 2.5 hours but I wanted quality. I don't mind the long prints. Unlike my Huxley, I can trust my Ultimaker to print by itself for long periods of time (unless there is a ton of retraction... then I get worried). I just hit go and walk away. Most of my prints are around 10 hours. I slice with Cura. Kicks netfabb's ass. |
With a provided slicing profile, 20 microns is perfectly fine. Now telling a new user, who has limited experience with a 3D printer and no profile is another story lol. Thats where majority of the failures occur.
Ive been wanting to try Cura (skeinpypy). I use skeinforge + slic3r but would appreciate the accelerated slicing of pypy on skeinforge as I like it way better over slic3r. I was wondering about netfabb as I know one of the default resolution in netfabb for UM is 0.075mm. So it should allow for a person to use it to adjust for 20 micron more easily. But again Ive never seen anyone use netfabb for slicing, only to fix broken STLS. |
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I used slic3r and KISSlicer for a while and liked them but Cura blows them away. There are some features of the other two I wish Cura had but I could easily request the programmer (Daid) to add them. He's pretty helpful. Give Cura a go. You'll love it. |
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