I have done kitchen furniture renovation like an year ago. I have printed jogs to align mounting pockets and holes for hinges, handles and drawer slides. Printing those was so efficient and fast that i did not bother to make any universal jig - just made a dedicated one per each kind of hardware - lots of good job done and money saved. Good video, good job on the doors!
No. I did all that unfortunately. The T fitting stub out for the sink is wrong. I've inadvertently made an S trap. I need to fix that today actually. You seem to know what you're talking about. What else did I do wrong?
Another way I think would be a cool way of holding those 3D printed jigs you've made down, would be by utilizing double headed nails, that way you can use a slide hammer to remove them straight out so you're avoiding damaging the 3D jigs you've made. Also just a heads up, when you cut that one jig down so you we're able to use it in the door jam @6:50 of the video, on your table saw and you removed it by lifting it straight up while the blade was still running, that could have went a totally different direction, if you catch my drift! But anyway good thing you still have all your digest and cool video!
In CAD, I just played with a larger and larger fillet until I had about a 1 million gap like I'd measured in the real world. It's such a simple project that I didn't bother to take a photo or scan the hinge. I just used a caliber and guestimated the fillet the first time around.
@@DesignPrototypeTest You could also print off some radius gauges . They take very little effort to design. PS I loved the video it shows yet another great use for this game-changing device.
In general this is somewhat of a false comparison. Running the printer and your lifetime is also worth a lot. So in many instances I could design as print something ( I am a professional automotive CAD designer) but I choose the buy the product instead if the product is cheap, has the features I need and it would take me longer to design and print the thing than simply ordering it online for a small price. So I would rather buy a 17$ product instead of wasting my lifetime on those things. Now If it´s your hobby and you like it, sure why not but I feel like I rather watch a movie which makes me more happy.
I have a bambu lab for about 6 months being a design engineer, I hear a lot about the information being stored in china and such but has anyone had a breach where they know their data was hacked or are we to assume its china and it happens I'm very curious to find out about this.
Like any good spy(ware) you probably won't be able to track the leak back to it's source. More worrisome for the average consumer is the fact that once the customer base is sufficiently dependent on their cloud they can start to charge us for the "service." Can you imagine having to pay to send each print to your printer that you bought? There is no justification for cloud printing which isn't nefarious.
IF... your TIME is WORTHLESS, AND you get your plastic extrusion stock FREE, then the first 1/2 of the video makes sense. Otherwise it was better, faster AND CHEAPER to buy the pre-hung door.
Before I knew the bottom of the door was rotted, it made sense to just rebuild the frame. Frame stock costs $50 versus a pre-hung door at $350. If my time is worth $50 an hour then I could have spent 6 hours rebuilding that frame and it still would have made logical sense.
@@DesignPrototypeTestPLEASE get rid of that mop on your chin - the whole “Duck Dynasty” look is sooooooo pre-CoVid. Great video as usual. Welcome back!
I didn't lose it. Bambu Lab entered the market and DESTROYED Prusa's sales so there is less of a need of my criticisms. Plus I've got better things to do (like build a bathroom) than continue to fight the good fight of showing the world the cheating and trespassing of Prusa. Funny that you think my hairy visage is indicative of anything other than a style decision when you subscribe to a number of other bearded emphatic and authoritative males such as @thenewsurvivalist, @tythefisch, @FowlersMakeryandMischief etc. Why attack me for having a grey beard when you clearly are desperate for a father figure in your life. Why not just say "Nice beard man. You look distinguished." And why does everything have to loop back to Prusa? It's an irrational cult for man-children of single over protective mothers who spend too much on their toys because they desperately need to feel like they own "the best' thing.
I have done kitchen furniture renovation like an year ago. I have printed jogs to align mounting pockets and holes for hinges, handles and drawer slides. Printing those was so efficient and fast that i did not bother to make any universal jig - just made a dedicated one per each kind of hardware - lots of good job done and money saved. Good video, good job on the doors!
The guy in charge of the plumbing down below was Josef Prusa.
No. I did all that unfortunately. The T fitting stub out for the sink is wrong. I've inadvertently made an S trap. I need to fix that today actually. You seem to know what you're talking about. What else did I do wrong?
lmao
Welcome back! I've missed seeing your uploads. Keep on, keeping on brother! 👍🏻
Lol @ "That's what she said" moment
still waiting for the bamboo labs part 2 video :(
Great story
Thanks for sharing your 3-D Design with all of us :-)
Nicely done. :)
This is some of the kind of stuff I like to do with my 3d printer. Really hard to want to spend money on something you can make yourself...
Hope you make some more videos showing small things like this on your renovation
Great video!
Thank you! Have a great day.
Where can we download your files? ;)
Another way I think would be a cool way of holding those 3D printed jigs you've made down, would be by utilizing double headed nails, that way you can use a slide hammer to remove them straight out so you're avoiding damaging the 3D jigs you've made. Also just a heads up, when you cut that one jig down so you we're able to use it in the door jam @6:50 of the video, on your table saw and you removed it by lifting it straight up while the blade was still running, that could have went a totally different direction, if you catch my drift! But anyway good thing you still have all your digest and cool video!
Nice job!!! So how did you fix the radius gap issue on your second 3D template?
In CAD, I just played with a larger and larger fillet until I had about a 1 million gap like I'd measured in the real world. It's such a simple project that I didn't bother to take a photo or scan the hinge. I just used a caliber and guestimated the fillet the first time around.
@@DesignPrototypeTest You could also print off some radius gauges . They take very little effort to design.
PS I loved the video it shows yet another great use for this game-changing device.
7:57 White acrylic to the rescue!
In general this is somewhat of a false comparison. Running the printer and your lifetime is also worth a lot. So in many instances I could design as print something ( I am a professional automotive CAD designer) but I choose the buy the product instead if the product is cheap, has the features I need and it would take me longer to design and print the thing than simply ordering it online for a small price. So I would rather buy a 17$ product instead of wasting my lifetime on those things. Now If it´s your hobby and you like it, sure why not but I feel like I rather watch a movie which makes me more happy.
I have a bambu lab for about 6 months being a design engineer, I hear a lot about the information being stored in china and such but has anyone had a breach where they know their data was hacked or are we to assume its china and it happens I'm very curious to find out about this.
Like any good spy(ware) you probably won't be able to track the leak back to it's source. More worrisome for the average consumer is the fact that once the customer base is sufficiently dependent on their cloud they can start to charge us for the "service." Can you imagine having to pay to send each print to your printer that you bought? There is no justification for cloud printing which isn't nefarious.
IF... your TIME is WORTHLESS, AND you get your plastic extrusion stock FREE, then the first 1/2 of the video makes sense. Otherwise it was better, faster AND CHEAPER to buy the pre-hung door.
Before I knew the bottom of the door was rotted, it made sense to just rebuild the frame. Frame stock costs $50 versus a pre-hung door at $350. If my time is worth $50 an hour then I could have spent 6 hours rebuilding that frame and it still would have made logical sense.
@@DesignPrototypeTest How much time did you spend making those templates (design, print, etc.)?
Maybe an hour not counting print time. They're very simple geometry.
Alright, you gotta shave.
:)
nah. LONG LIVE THE BEARD
@@DesignPrototypeTestI didn't know who you were for a second, then I recognized the voice. I was just kidding.
@@DesignPrototypeTestPLEASE get rid of that mop on your chin - the whole “Duck Dynasty” look is sooooooo pre-CoVid. Great video as usual. Welcome back!
!!!!!!
Gosh, loosing the Prusa war really did a number on you
I didn't lose it. Bambu Lab entered the market and DESTROYED Prusa's sales so there is less of a need of my criticisms. Plus I've got better things to do (like build a bathroom) than continue to fight the good fight of showing the world the cheating and trespassing of Prusa. Funny that you think my hairy visage is indicative of anything other than a style decision when you subscribe to a number of other bearded emphatic and authoritative males such as @thenewsurvivalist, @tythefisch, @FowlersMakeryandMischief etc. Why attack me for having a grey beard when you clearly are desperate for a father figure in your life. Why not just say "Nice beard man. You look distinguished." And why does everything have to loop back to Prusa? It's an irrational cult for man-children of single over protective mothers who spend too much on their toys because they desperately need to feel like they own "the best' thing.