Prusa Build

Prusa Build

This article has been reformatted (and hobbled) to suit LinkedIn.
The original is here.

Unexpected side-project time! I’ve been sans-3D-printer for 6 months, which is about 5.5 months too long. After a very intense lap of the forums and review sites, the influencer and influencer-shamer vids, and a re-check of the gut, I decided the Original Prusa i3 MK3S+ was for me. A little too “3D printed” for my tastes, but the Internet had nice things to say. It comes as a “kit”, but what doesn’t these days. Silly me didn’t realise this is no Ikea-style one-allen-key job! I haven’t had this much fine building exercise since my model plane days as a kid. And even that experience is no comparison. So when you go through a journey like this, you feel compelled to share. Talk about viral-survivor-bias marketing!

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Just assembling the frame took at least 6 hours. These are no ordinary 3D printed parts! It’s stunning that 3D printing has come so far in the last 5 years that this company can have a business designing self-replicating printers, whose parts are such high tolerance and finish quality.

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By fantastic coincidence, the extruded aluminium in the subframe is the exact 3030 T-slot profile that I’ve been evaluating for another project. That other project was about to cost me $500 to order some sample materials - suddenly unnecessary, as I got to handle and assess these parts during assembly.

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All printed parts come from Prusa’s print farm (and are open source). The farm runs the textured build plate, which I also bought. Pretty handy opportunity to see the effect on printed parts prior to my first print.

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Every assembly chapter comes with its own set of bagged fixing hardware, plastic parts and electronic components. This is chapter 5, the “E-axis” (extruder). The first chapter where the classic plotter frame becomes a printer.

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Even the extruder itself is a DIY-assembly job. The confidence in complex printed features is extraordinary. Some of these recesses have teeth, blind passages and interference fit features!

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The various graphic design elements are gorgeous, obviously a point of pride amongst the occasionally aesthetics-adverse 3D printing crowd.

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I’m a confident handyman, but some of these assemblies are a feat!

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Cable management is a fine art. The opportunities for ruining everything got bigger and bigger as the hours rolled on.

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But I was one of the lucky ones ;-) After maybe 15 hours of tense concentration, this was an enjoyable moment.

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Even the first customer left good feedback.

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Darren Burrowes

Director and Co-Founder, BlueZone Group | Maritime Robotics and Uncrewed Systems | EY EOTY 2018 Regional Finalist

2 年

Certainly some lessons there for rapid ship acquisition - can you scale the size!?

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James Anstey

Managing Director of Prediktivity and co-Founder of SMART!

2 年

I presume you have scaled to mass production and the bath is now overflowing with an entire fleet. ??

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