Here’s my lamp if you’re curious, printed with a .8 mm nozzle, otherwise it would fail https://imgur.com/a/mRqw1pI
And you're saying it would fail with a nozzle smaller than 0.8mm?!
https://www.juxt.pro/blog/designing-3d-printable-objects-wit...
Looks quite fun
Also recommend checking out the live Marimo notebook linked down at the bottom. Incredible what you can do with Pyodide + Marimo these days. I only wish there was a webassembly version of jax to make it easier to share random numpyro experiments.
I'm just dipping my toes in 3D printing, with a recent acquisition of a Bambu P2S
If you're getting into OpenSCAD I'd highly recommend getting Belfry ASAP.
https://github.com/BelfrySCAD/BOSL2/wiki
I wouldn't really consider using OpenSCAD without it
My Bambu A1 mini has been reliable despite the challenging geometry; pretty sure your P2S will work just as well if not better. Good luck!
I found that starting with an SVG and extruding from there is perfect in OpenSCAD, but I’m sure I’m underutilizing it a lot.
I wrote a bit about it here if you’re curious https://hackaday.io/project/202488-manhattan-subway-map/deta...
The largest mesh I worked with in Fusion 360 is a digital elevation map of California, it has 2.8M vertices and 5.6M faces and it's still possible to get things done (like making a CAM to carve a 2 foot x 2 foot map with reasonable details).
Yes, but it is painfully slow. Even perforated patterns are quite slow to generate.
Fusion360 is just stupid fast at perforations and sophisticated modeling constructions via its python API. I use it because it works well, but I'd be happier if I didn't have to maintain that Autodesk dependency...
As per drooping over time, perhaps for some of these models the "Persistence of Memory" might apply a nice transform to the shapes.