Great Design !

not to be mean, but this looks like a Hextraction knockoff
@TonchoRecan_2873530 I thought I cooked with this design my guy :(
Hextraction was a knockoff of my design
@TonchoRecan_2873530 nah bro jk, it totally was. I was just curious and thought I take 5 minutes or smt and design this
@ShadGallaway When I convert it to jpeg I lose a lot of quality but it is good enough. Thank you!
@Peter_389045 if you message me your email address I can send you a full-size copy if that would help. I’m sure printables compresses the upload as well!
@SNAFU_3D hey man, just send me your tissue box parameters and I can scale and adjust the design to for your tissue box if you’d like
Awesome minimalist design. It is eye catching but not over whelming. Neat design.
This model has been my "prove it's working" print for my Prusa MMU2S which I ordered the day it was released. There are 176 tool changes, so this is a reasonable functionality test.
From December 2017 to today, I have managed to print a grand total of two frogs without a missing layer or a failure to complete. Years of MMU mods helped a bit, but didn't result in a complete print. This time, I heavily modded the extruder, and I'm finally seeing the MMU work like it's supposed to.
I really like this model. To read about it's design, go to https://n-e-r-v-o-u-s.com/blog/?p=5595
@robw5_688175 Yeah I know his look extremely good. They look injection molded but if you actually read the comment he is using an extremely high end printer that makes yours and mine look like sad toys lol
@robw5_688175 Looks good! And very cool getting the MMU working. The R3D Pro3 (and the Ultimaker S3/S5 and a handful of other over-priced printers) are designed to run round the clock in a production environment and their engineers have spent hundreds of hours tweaking their profiles to "just work". But with enough time and trial and error, I think you can get very close to the same results for a lot less money. And even with this, I still end up experimenting and editing my profiles if I want to work with a difficult filament like nylon or a trick geometry for a particular part. And of course they've done most of their testing and calibration with a 0.4mm nozzle, so when I want to use a 0.2, 0.6, or 0.8, I may have a good starting point but still have to test and tweak.
The reason I got a dual-extruder was so the right side could do support material for functional parts. My favorite combination is ASA+HIPS (which works like a dream) followed by PLA+PVA or Nylon+Ionic, both of which sometimes work great and sometimes drive me crazy. For multi-color prints, I think a filament switcher like the MMU or Palette or Bambu's AMS is much more powerful, especially if you can incorporate up to 16 colors rather than just 2.
Here's a print of the three-colored version that turned out fantastic.
Printed in Hatchbox PLA
This thing is hilarious.
Simply print, did it super fast using Marble PLA.
Thanks for the upload
I changed it a little bit to use it as a door sign. I love it :-)
Would you like me to design some 3d-printable band-aids for this? :3
@Chmarr Oh, I'm not very good with jokes. I took it literally lol
Neat first aid kit. Printed it out with red PLA and it turned our great! Room for plenty of stuff
Hey! I spent the last 8 months designing this model. I would really love if you guys could check it out. It is a really neat design for an RC hovercraft.
@JMor_519002 Super Cool! I used these hinges for an enclosure as well. I like them because they are very easy to disassemble and upgrade.
this looks really cool, did it ever get completed?
Can you provide instructions do this, beacuse it looks cool and i want to print it
@Peter_389045 Thanks! I will still wait for it to be functional tho. (edited)
@KaiyangLou_2063105 haha it might be a while 😂 life gets pretty crazy sometimes. I do plan on coming back to this project soon. When I do I will be sure to let you know!