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Don't forget the super expensive resin you will be purchasing from him too! $350 per liter compared to $40/liter for the lemon curry guy's resin. A year ago, Junior Veloso could have offered these kinds of prices, people would have ate them up and it would be cutting edge poo poo. Anyone who purchases this stuff today is just a sucker. Obsurveyor fucked around with this message at 17:47 on Apr 1, 2012 |
# ? Apr 1, 2012 17:45 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 09:25 |
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Yeah $350 per litre is taking the piss.
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# ? Apr 1, 2012 21:18 |
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Obsurveyor posted:Don't forget the super expensive resin you will be purchasing from him too! $350 per liter compared to $40/liter for the lemon curry guy's resin. Yea, that price is right up there with commercial printers. Like the asiga that was just released on saturday. OH YES, 4cm x 3cm x 7.5cm build envelope SIGN ME UP FOR 7 THOUSAND DOLLARS. Mind you they are boasting a pretty impressive 1 micron Z resolution. https://www.asiga.com/store/
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# ? Apr 1, 2012 22:20 |
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Obsurveyor posted:Don't forget the super expensive resin you will be purchasing from him too! $350 per liter compared to $40/liter for the lemon curry guy's resin. I think that it is a combination of: 1- He is trying to recoup his investment too quickly (I don't think anyone disbelieves that he invested quite a bit of his own money into getting his first prototype running, and a huge portion of his time to write his own software). 2- He is misjudging how much his efforts are actually worth on a per unit basis. 3- He is terrible at sourcing parts/does not want to invest the time/energy/capital to source parts for kits 4- He is misjudging what the market is willing to pay for what he has built at this point in time. All in all, there is still hope he'll wake up and come up with a more reasonable pricing scheme, investing the necessary energy to source a proper kit, and discard his current process of (seemingly) 'I should make my money back on the first fifteen units sold and then be pure profit from there'. I however, will not be holding my breath for that to happen.
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 03:26 |
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I tried some googling, didn't see much, is there much thought to 3d printing and cnc finishing? I see the types of tolerances even homebuilt cnc machines can achieve and I think it might be neat to print 99% of the finished product, and swap heads, and get the really nice smoothness people want (where applicable). All the mechanics are there.
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 03:51 |
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Kallikrates posted:I tried some googling, didn't see much, is there much thought to 3d printing and cnc finishing? I see the types of tolerances even homebuilt cnc machines can achieve and I think it might be neat to print 99% of the finished product, and swap heads, and get the really nice smoothness people want (where applicable). All the mechanics are there. How would you calibrate it? Remember when people are talking about home 3d printing, the WORST they are talking about is a .5mm (500 micron) resolution, human hairs can be thicker then that. I can't see any way I could reasonably set a tool or workpiece to .5mm (let alone a tuned ultimakers 20 microns)- When people machine to extreme tolerance they do so relative to there other machined points, not to an arbitrary point -- which is what you'd need to do to set up a 'finished' workpiece and then immediately 'finish' it with CNC machining. Further, even if you could figure out some way to set it up- CNC is limited to 2.5d top down, which means you can't get under overhangs, or really under anything that you could not touch by looking down at the object. Of course at the professional level you can do these sorts of things using laser calibration, and 5 axis CNC robot arms that can happily get up and under things; but those are expensive devices (actually more then one of the high end 3d printers that would just get you the insane resolution from the get go).
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 04:21 |
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Human hairs are not 500microns. More like 60-70 microns
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 06:01 |
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Cakefool posted:Yeah $350 per litre is taking the piss. Turns out it wont cost that much apparently... the indie gogo page is up, although i'm sure you've all seen it by now. http://www.indiegogo.com/veloso3dprinter He says the resin price will be 150 per kilo-ish. Mind you he said his printer would be around 1500 so he could be totally bullshitting everyone. Also jesus man please get someone who knows english to write your marketing material
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 16:52 |
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Claes Oldenburger posted:He says the resin price will be 150 per kilo-ish.
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 20:37 |
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Obsurveyor posted:That's still more than 3 times as expensive as Bucktown Polymers(lemon curry dude). Unfortunately we have no way of knowing whether that is an apples to apples comparison. Veloso made it sound like he came up with his own formula.
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# ? Apr 2, 2012 23:03 |
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kafkasgoldfish posted:Unfortunately we have no way of knowing whether that is an apples to apples comparison. Veloso made it sound like he came up with his own formula. I am assuming the stuff he uses in the videos, based on his past posts, is much more expensive than his new economical, theoretical formula.
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# ? Apr 3, 2012 00:19 |
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Just for an apples to oranges comparison, how much is a reel of PLU or ABS by weight? Also - if your lamp matches the resin, whats to stop you buying the lemon curry resin for use in your veloso printer? cakesmith handyman fucked around with this message at 15:33 on Apr 3, 2012 |
# ? Apr 3, 2012 15:30 |
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Cakefool posted:Just for an apples to oranges comparison, how much is a reel of PLU or ABS by weight? ABS/PLA are around $40-45/kg versus $150/kg for the resin from veloso and $40/kg for the resin from Bucktown Polymers.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 00:28 |
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Cakefool posted:Just for an apples to oranges comparison, how much is a reel of PLU or ABS by weight? Viscosity and other flow characteristics, if they're different enough.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 00:49 |
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Midjack posted:Viscosity and other flow characteristics, if they're different enough. most of this would mean the amount of time the light takes to harden it right? Hopefully veloso built layer hardening times into his software or people gonna be maaaad when they cant use cheaper resins or he decides to stop making it.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 02:05 |
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Just getting started into the whole world of 3D printing after a friend of mine finished his first 3D Printer and intrigued me. Going to start with a Prusa Mendel and self-source as much as I can. My friend is doing up the printed parts and I've started sourcing the basic nuts and bolts. I have zero... zero experience in this field so this should either be an awesome sense of accomplishment or an utter gong show resulting in missing fingers and a burnt down house.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 03:15 |
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Claes Oldenburger posted:most of this would mean the amount of time the light takes to harden it right? Hopefully veloso built layer hardening times into his software or people gonna be maaaad when they cant use cheaper resins or he decides to stop making it. Yeah, it's also going to have a bunch of subtleties like thermal expansion rate, contraction after cooling, conduction of heat away from the treated volume, etc. etc. - all of which is possible to adjust for, but you won't be able to use a different resin and get good results without a BUNCH of adjustments.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 04:31 |
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roop where are you located? We're about to pull our group buy in the midwest for Prusas and it looks like it's $300ish all told. If you're close you can get in on it.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 05:27 |
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insta posted:roop where are you located? We're about to pull our group buy in the midwest for Prusas and it looks like it's $300ish all told. If you're close you can get in on it.
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# ? Apr 4, 2012 12:22 |
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Haha! In an effort to rope in more suckers, Junior Veloso has hidden the number of people who have contributed for each of his rewards. There is no way he is going to make it on the $2k and $4k levels. He needs to get a lot of people buying up the overpriced instructions. The problem is that this technology is so new due to his purge of information and closed source, nobody who would normally just throw money at this kind of stuff really understands it well enough to take the plunge. Everyone who does understand it can figure out that it is way over priced and there are free alternatives. In fact, someone linked me to a crazy awesome looking open source program that uses your GPU to slice stuff super fast last night: ChemShapes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efiLcJ5tDvk Obsurveyor fucked around with this message at 11:58 on Apr 5, 2012 |
# ? Apr 5, 2012 11:55 |
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Obsurveyor posted:Haha! In an effort to rope in more suckers, Junior Veloso has hidden the number of people who have contributed for each of his rewards. There is no way he is going to make it on the $2k and $4k levels. He needs to get a lot of people buying up the overpriced instructions. The problem is that this technology is so new due to his purge of information and closed source, nobody who would normally just throw money at this kind of stuff really understands it well enough to take the plunge. Everyone who does understand it can figure out that it is way over priced and there are free alternatives. Aw, that's lame.. The fun of kickstarter et all is that you get to see who has gone for what. I wrote about it for the Ponoko blog last night and still had the page cached this morning: Edit: Wait, maybe the whole campaign is disabled for now? The "claim this perk" buttons are gone, too. Edit 2: That must be it, you can still see the specific backers under the funders tab: http://www.indiegogo.com/veloso3dprinter?c=pledges Snackmar fucked around with this message at 12:18 on Apr 5, 2012 |
# ? Apr 5, 2012 12:11 |
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techknight posted:Edit: Wow, you're right. I didn't even notice that pledging was totally gone.
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 12:39 |
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$59 for a high-level design details PDF with no measurements? I don't know what types he's targeting but it ain't people like me.
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 15:59 |
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Hack-a-day covered him again and (in the comments) the author really rips on Veloso. http://hackaday.com/2012/04/05/3d-printer-with-insane-accuracy-uses-a-dlp-projector/
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 16:06 |
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quote:It was very hard to keep this article at least somewhat positive*, but I think the implied subtext remains. I’m just hoping some builder out there sees the words, “3D printer”, “resin”, and “DLP projector” and heads off to their workshop. This bring up a good point, in that we're all having fun going hahahahah but really the only problem (so far) is the poor management on the kit/biz end of things.
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 16:12 |
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If it were being run like any sane open hardware design and sensible kickstarter, we could all go back to slobbering his knob like we've been waiting to do. It's a shame, really. e: Although as someone kinda mentioned in those comments too: Veloso's stuff, while still impressive, was WAY moreso a year or so ago. The Eyes Have It fucked around with this message at 18:56 on Apr 5, 2012 |
# ? Apr 5, 2012 16:14 |
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Apologies if this has already been posted, but somehow I stumbled across this: http://www.chemshapes.com/ They just released a realtime slicer application, free software of course
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 20:09 |
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My Rhythmic Crotch posted:Apologies if this has already been posted, but somehow I stumbled across this: http://www.chemshapes.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efiLcJ5tDvk
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:29 |
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Anyone know of a good site like shapeways in the EU? I'd like to mess around with some small prints, but rather not pay our lovely 33%+$30 import tax for stuff from outside the EU every time :/
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 17:04 |
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Didn't Shapeways start in Holland?
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 17:08 |
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HardCoil posted:Anyone know of a good site like shapeways in the EU? I'd like to mess around with some small prints, but rather not pay our lovely 33%+$30 import tax for stuff from outside the EU every time :/ i.materialise is EU-based.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 17:57 |
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Ponoko has some EU based laser cutting services. But it looks like their 3D printings is just USA based.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 19:08 |
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I thought Shapeways was in the EU I have ordered quite a few times from them recently and my UPS boxes always come in from the EU.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 19:11 |
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Haha whoops, so much for assuming, it's indeed in the Netherlands... thanks
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 19:22 |
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RepRap Pro is releasing a mendal kit, to go with their huxley kit. Its avaiable to order for those who subscribed to the mailing list. In a day or two it will open to public. http://reprappro.com/Mendel Cost: UK - £499 + £12 P&P = £511 (incl VAT) EU - €599 + €35 P&P = €624 (incl UK VAT) North America - $699US + $70 P&P = $769 Rest of the world - $699US + $80 P&P = $779 Looks like they are going to have a colour expansion for it in the future, adding two more print heads for printing multiple colours or materials.
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# ? Apr 9, 2012 15:02 |
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I don't know how many people here are members of the StackExchange network, but there is a proposal for a personal manufacturing branch of it. Basically this thread in stackoverflow form. http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/22246/3d-printers-laser-cutters-personal-manufacturing commit to it
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# ? Apr 10, 2012 14:25 |
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Man, I've got a hard decision. Everything is coming together, but I'm really trying to make a decision on whether to get spend almost $2k on a Utilmaker or buy a cheaper Thing-O-Matic MakerBot or Replicator. In an effort to save money, because the Euro is trading at a $1.30 rate, do I really need the Laser Cut Parts? Do I really need the NetFabb engine?
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# ? Apr 18, 2012 07:21 |
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My ORD Bot kit is supposed to arrive in the mail today, so I will be assembling it later today. If I can get a camera setup that I like, I may live stream it through the Reprap Google Hangout. I will post more info if I do. Super pumped to finally get started building this thing!
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# ? Apr 18, 2012 14:20 |
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Young Freud posted:In an effort to save money, because the Euro is trading at a $1.30 rate, do I really need the Laser Cut Parts? Do I really need the NetFabb engine? What tools do you have access to? It might be possible to get parts cut locally cheaper from a plan, check waterjetters as well as lasercutters, depending on the parts a bandsaw & pillar drill may suffice. No idea about the netfabb engine.
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# ? Apr 18, 2012 14:28 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 09:25 |
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Young Freud posted:Man, I've got a hard decision. Everything is coming together, but I'm really trying to make a decision on whether to get spend almost $2k on a Utilmaker or buy a cheaper Thing-O-Matic MakerBot or Replicator. Don't buy the thing-o-matic. At this point it's just more expensive and less capable than a good prusa kit. The replicator on the other hand, does other cool things. If you're actually considering the ultimaker, you really should get that one. No, you do not really need the NetFabb engine. It is a good G-code generator, but the reprap people know that good g-code is key, and are improving all the time. It's also something that you can upgrade to later if you decide you need it. The only way to skip out of the laser cut parts though is to have them made locally. They are integral to the frame, and they include the build platform as well.
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# ? Apr 18, 2012 17:19 |