Tuesday, April 20. 2010Comments (4) Trackback (1) SHiFT 2010: Personal fabrication
Together with Siert Wijnia from FabLab Protospace I gave a workshop and presentation at SHiFT 2010 in Lisbon, Portugal. The topic was Personal Fabrication while highlighting the roles of FabLabs and the RepRap project in making fabrication technology available to the (creative) masses!
Before going to Lisbon I shipped a batch of parts. A second Mini-Mendel machine was (partially) assembled during the conference. I will blog about this later!
SHiFT 2010, Lisbon: Personal Fabrication View more presentations from Erik de Bruijn. Slides: PDF (web), PDF (print), PPT (OpenOffice, source). Now, since the Icelandic Vulcano erupted I'm forced to spend my time on the Portugese beaches until my rescheduled flight departs on Thursday (hopefully). Monday, April 12. 2010Comments (2) Trackbacks (0) [NL] RepRap op Omroep BrabantTelevisieSome time ago I had a visit by the Omroep Brabant TV crew.
The item was broadcast on 30 March 2010. The RepRap part starts at 5 minutes and 30 seconds: Click to watch! / Klik op de screenshot hierboven om de video te bekijken! [update]If you have trouble watching it, please use this youtube video: [/update] This is the iPhone / iPod dock that was printed during the video:
Related: I've also been on national news with RepRap. Sunday, April 11. 2010[NL] RapRap in het nieuws!
(English translation here and here)
RepRap was weer uitgebreid in het nieuws. Gisteren in de "Trouw": Krant![]() Klik hier voor het online artikel! RadioGisteravond was ik met Siert ook in de uitzending van het bekende radioprogramma "Met 't Oog op morgen". In de laatste 20 minuten komen we het meeste aan het woord, daarvoor worden we geintroduceerd en wordt aangegeven dat Siert een fluitje gaat (proberen te) printen. Om het te beluisteren, klik hier voor de player van Radio 1 of MP3 (mirror). Ook staat er een artikeltje op 't weblog van 't oog.
![]() Wednesday, April 7. 2010Comments (10) Trackback (1) Mini-mendel built and working!
I went to the USA to visit Zach and Bre and the others from Makerbot and to give a talk at MIT for an innovation lab. I proposed to give a demo, but didn't dare bring one of my Darwin RepRaps on an airplane. They are very heavy and fragile, unlike the Mini-Mendel, which is quite sturdy compact and lightweight and can fit in a smaller, strong box. I had brought the printed parts (blog post about ordering, printing and preparations here) with me to the US and worked on them at New York Resistor. Besides having a really great time there, I also made a lot of progress. I barely got it running in time for the demo, I had done a proof of concept extrusion with X-Y movement, but it wasn't exactly what you would call 3D printing yet, let alone reliable printing.
In the day after the presentation I fixed the most important problems (belt tension, belts running off the pulleys, writing firmware bug workarounds, etc.). The fact that I didn't have a unix based toolchain for compiling the PIC32 code of the BitsFromBytes board, did make matters really complicated. Overly ambitious I had been trying to get multi-material working on their v3.1 board. I actually did a short amount of multi-material extrusion but couldn't repeat the same with different g-code (after deleting the file that worked from the SD card). The parts for the Mini-Mendel were printed with both the Darwin from the Q1 2008 cast parts from BitsFromBytes and the Darwin offspring machine that I've printed with the former machine. So it's at least in part a third generation machine, but the majority of the parts came from my older machine (I'm so used to the process). Anyway, a picture says a thousand words, so here's a moving picture (and no more talking): (BTW: if you didn't pay attention to the song's lyrics, you should listen to it again!) The machine is considerably smaller than the Darwin (or regular Mendel), as you can see from the following picture:
I'm driving the extruder with my 'remote' drive mechanism:
You can put a beefy NEMA23 on it to have a lot of torque and without much complexity (just the part, a motor, a bearing and a pinch wheel). It is pushed into a Bowden cable (a PTFE tube). At the hot end, I'm using my new coupling to keep the Bowden cable attached to it:
There's documentation available for it on Thingiverse, as are the models to download and print this add on. The parts/suppliers that I used for this can also be found at Thingiverse. |
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