Thursday, December 31, 2015

Parts

Parts ready to be sorted and inventoried


Okay, so this is more of an extremely large list of parts that I've recieved and may have been a little bit preoccupied and not bothered to post anything. So, this is all of that stuff:








I.D, stands for Inner Diameter
O.D. stands for Outer Diameter


Keep in mind that the number of pieces that we have is NOT the number required. It is the same as or higher than the number required.



My trip to the Innisfil HackLab

First off, Happy New Year everybody! Yes, I'm working on New Year's Eve because I'm not doing anything else today.


So, a few days ago I took a trip down to the MakerSpace in Innisfil to meet Alan, one of the people who works there helping people print off their own designs, troubleshoot ideas, or cut something out on their ABSOLUTELY AMAZING LASER CUTTER! Anyways, he was nice enough to take some time to talk to me about my project and possibly supporting my project. He also invited me to next year's maker fest, which you can look at here. I'll probably be at the 2016 makerfest, but that's a ways away for now. I hope to have the printer finished by the time the festival rolls around.

During a talk with him, I realized that one of the extruders that I wanted to try was completely useless and should be abandoned immediately. For those of you who don't know what an extruder is, it's basically the piece of the printer that takes the plastic from a giant spool, melts it, and lays it down on the print bed. It's got a few different parts, and so you can see what one looks like I'll put a picture of one in the blog as well.


Anyways, thanks to that conversation, it saved me a TON of plastic and time, so that's good.


I'd like to extend my thanks again to Alan and the Innisfil library for their time, and if you get the opportunity then you should go and check it out. It's a pretty cool facility with a lot of pretty cool people. Music recording stuff, private study rooms, makerspace equipped with a laser cutter and two 3D printers. So go do that. Seriously. It's a cool place.
Alan and I at the HackLab
An Extruder

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Merry Christmas!

'Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house, not a creature was stirring - not even a mouse.... but the 3D printer was grinding and noisy. . . It could be heard all through the house!    😊.     2015 - Christmas with the 3D printer


Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and happy New Year!


Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Small Update

Small update, I don't actually have to write a blog right now, so..


I've started ordering parts in hope of starting assembly over the christmas break. I've ordered bar stock, washers, screws and nuts. Just so you know.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Well...

Well, here it is folks. We have received help in the form of a 3D printer. That has to go back on Monday. We used to have 48 hours of print time left and now we have 36 left. That's convenient. However, due to the fact that the 3D printer is a MakerBot Replicator Mini, it prints with a thing called a raft. And it has a fairly small print bed. You can see the raft in the picture. It's a layer of plastic. Sorry that the image is in a terrible resolution. Anyways, that adds the extra step of peeling a layer of plastic from EVERY SINGLE PIECE! Don't get me wrong, I am glad for the help. I did, however try to disable this with an extremely long process that I'm sure nobody wants to hear about, but that caused the parts to go absolutely crazy instead of behaving like they're supposed too. Which sucks. Alot. So, I'm back to printing with this silly rafty thingy instead of the other printer, the Dremel3D printer which I'm still using but due to availability, I'm still fighting with print ability.

Monday, December 7, 2015

My random piece of writing

Why not put in a steam engine? It's related to my paragraph


Well, I haven't made any progress other than trying to continue securing help to get pieces printed, so I figured I would put in a small piece of writing for no real reason other than the fact that it's related. So here it is.


A 3D printer in the home is an almost unimaginable feat for most people, including myself, but what if it wasn’t? Introducing the Mendel. Made by a small company called Reprap, it costs almost $1500 to make. I’m looking to lower that cost to less than $1000 and make the printer easier to assemble and use. This will target entrepreneurs looking to kick-start a manufacturing business, and will also be of interest to residential users looking for a hobby, similar to myself. This project marks the start of something bigger for me, allowing me to see that I can build machines that could change the world.

Having the ability to design something that can replicate itself is amazing! Why was I inspired to do this project instead of some other one, like designing a toy or a car for the marketplace? That's because I am passionate about engineering; the art of taking knowledge of mathematics and science and using them to invent, design and build many amazing things. One great example of such ingenuity is the steam engine, a driving factor in the industrial revolution and a key player in the evolution of technology. What's the next step in our technological evolution? Robots? Flying cars? My belief is that our next major step forward in our path of technology is a 3D printer which is able to do something so large scale such as to print houses out of mud, or do something so delicate as printing a human organ, single cells at a time. Having an understanding of the technology that may one day become a part of our society in more ways than one would be extremely important in my lifetime, which is why I wish to pursue this project. Through this project I hope to gain an understanding of what may one day make most of the world, and maybe even the people, around us.