For this little project you will need: a PEI plate with a (carbon) pattern, superglue or marley special glue for plastic cold welding, a filament cutter, a piece of filament and, if the printer is poorly calibrated, a suitable drill to rework the filament holes.

Any patterned printing plate is possible as long as the front is on the printing plate. Due to its size, this project requires 2 prints. 3 loop walls, 4 top and bottom layers, min. 12-15% infill gyroid, no support required.

Use the small drill [1.75-2mm] to cut the holes approximately 3 mm deep. Make sure that the holes on the rounded corners are only 2 mm deep and do not drill through the front. Cut 5 pieces of 10 mm filament and glue them into the filament holes on the front panel. Wait until the glue has dried.

Then cut the pins to 2-3mm length and test at the top that both parts fit together completely. If not, the pins still need to be trimmed a little. Then apply the glue to the second plate on the top surface in the middle and the holes and then insert the pins into all the holes before pressing it together firmly.

I hope you like my remix and give me a like/make/share.
Many Thanks goes to:
Bambu build plate holder von ag_atlpe
Creative Commons — Namensnennung — Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen
Wall mountable build plate holder for Bambu or any other similarly size plates von AdrianGarside
Creative Commons — Namensnennung
The author remixed this model.
I removed the back plate from the Remix model and rounded some corners. The screw holes were reduced to 2 and lowered into the holder and relocated. Because I wanted a special carbon look on the front, I separated a part and placed it on the front so that it was on the carbon side of the plate. To do this, I left holes in it so that I could use pieces of filament and glue to connect the whole thing together again in a stable manner. I have attached a mirrored version.