I found that 3D printing for 4 years now I have grown accustomed to the metric system it’s just so much easier. But that hasn’t effected my love for your channel ❤️👍
I liked that you took the time in the intro to give the "why" of the project, the videos are much more engaging when they tell a story. Also, the nail was great. 👍🏻
this is definitely one of those things that is a really good lesson for people to do when learning 3d printing. Everyone's kit is different so you have to design everything yourself, problem solve it all. But its also not too complicated to design basic holders. for a nicer finish, and a more adaptable system i'd have gone with making a few different sized of brackets, with french cleats on the tops/sides, so the idea is you can screw those brackets onto the wood, and then the different holders slide onto those cleats and clip in place, so they are locked but also removeable. That way you get a nice finish without having to have through holes on the face of everything.
I love it. I built, well sorta, its not as sophisticated, a wall holder for my stuff as well with old lcd panel and suction hooks. Its so satisfying to use something you built. So i totally get that feeling
Just a little tip: You never need to measure screws. Every readily available screw is normalized, meaning that all of its measurements follow a norm. For example, a flathead M12x1.5x5 screw follows the ansi metric norm (because of the m), has a diameter of 12mm, a step of 1.5mm and a screw lenght of 5mm. All of the other measurements can be found on a "flathead screw ansi metric size chart"
Yes and no. Machine bolts made to standard.. sure, but there are so many variations of the head and other features that is better to just measure the bolt you have in hand to properly design the countersink or counterbore. Also woodscrews have even more mistery about thread diameter.. a quick caliper check sorts this unknown fast. I find myself designing stuff to 3dprint and select the hardware from what i have on hand and design for that specific hardware i have. And boy do I have a collection of random bits and bobs (i hoard screws and bolts whenever i have, and before tossing old broken stuff i harvest screws/springs/ball bearings/etc). Better to measure my random bolt/screw than search the exact standard for the screw. Shaft dameter and thread specification if needed is available in the standard, but the head is rarely up to the standard, and the head is what counts for proper counterbores/countersunks. I use the ISO-DIN standard mostly (i'm in Europe) The trust in standards can be high for industrial structural bolts and nuts that in fact has the standard printed on the box (like DIN971) when new from the store. But old screws/bolts made for furniture/chipboars/electronics/cars/machinery - could have a lot of variation.. car bolts in particular are high grade bolts very true to the standard if you can pinpoint it, but otherwise they are allover or even very custom made for that aplication. I have head bolts, conrod cap bolts and nuts, suspesion arms bolts... all have weird shapes of the head and the shaft, mostly fine thread, - good luck finding the standard or the original spec for that bolt. I can still use the quirky finethread car bolts if i also have the nuts .. so measuring ensures me the correct fit rather than standards. The standards are very good whe you design a new product without the hardware in hand, in fact you search the catalog for the right hardware for your project, design with the standard dimensions, then print/manufacture and buy the selected hardware.
@@AsiAzzy that's a valid point! In the field that I work in, we rarely have the components on hand, therefore, we can't measure them. Also, you said that when using old repurposed screws is better to measure them, and that is completely correct! But, in this kind of application, it would be quite impractical to be repurposing old screws and see which one fits where. Therefore, if you are buying new, it's probably easier to see the normalized measurements.
Thank you for this video Morley. I modified the dimensions slightly to fit my tactical flashlight, and now I have a great flashlight mount on the top of my computer hutch.
The quick and dirty way to skip measuring the screw is to add them in from a database in Fusion--I normally scale up a couple percent for tolerance and use as a tool to cut. Not sure if this ends up being easier, but works for me
The only thing I would do differently as add some felt to certain areas to prevent scratching with continued use. For example felt to the inside of the Letterman holder or felt to the watch drum etc.
Awesome, as always. I've a simple grasp of fusion (getting better the more I use it) but your videos show me the extra steps that I didn't even know existed to make designing & drawing so much easier - inputting parameters for instance. Can I ask why you didn't print the phone holder upright? You would have avoided any support material and the front would have looked a lot cleaner without the large steps.
Thank you so much! You know, I honestly didn't think of it until reading your comment. That's a great idea, and I should've printed it upright! Next time :)
I think, I love the fact that you're so easily willing to just get the thing done and avoid nit-picky features or issues. The entire time you designed things I thought to myself "that could be so much better here, and here, and there" and it just didn't matter. You printed it anyways, I would have trashed most prints that looked close to the results of your printer. I would have spent far too much time designing PERFECT fit holders and such, but you just let it go and kept going. No fit n finish, no polish, just do the thing. I need to do this more
For that watch stand, you could have printed just a little lip in the bottom, and kept the watch part itself separate. Tight enough that the layer lines alone create the nice snap fit. That way you wouldn't have had to poke holes all the way through
Wonderful project! For the phone holder you could also have bought a cheap wireless charger and take the electronic out of it, integrating it into the holder so that you don't have to fiddle with the cable all the time.
Next time you do a wall mounted 'storage' unit, use a French Cleat setup. No need for screws except to mount the rail. Then each of your items will be infinitely movable sideways.
And then they can fall off the cleats every time you take your knife out. I personally think French cleats are overrated for stuff that doesn’t need to be adjustable. Uses a lot more material and adds complexity to something simple. Don’t get me wrong, they have their place, but I think they are more suited to blind mounting of larger objects like a large picture frame or upper cabinet instead of the end-all solution to wall mounting. Many a sheet of plywood has been dedicated to walls full of French cleats for holders that never move.
Instead of making screw holes that go all the way through to the front of your holders, you could’ve made screw head-sized holes on just the backside with a smaller notch above the hole like with picture hangers, etc. You would just put the screw directly into the board with the head slightly protruding and your 3D printed holder would just clip onto it.
How do you measure the strength or threshold capacity for shear or vertically strong builds? Is there a table or way to know how strong your 3d printed items are or the weight they can hold? How does this work in 3d printing? All this is new to me. Tnx!
late to the game question: could you turn your watch holder to anti-clockwise 90 degrees and use the cavity for your keys? Also why imperial all the time?
Wow loved that. Makes me want to buy a 3d printer so bad. The satisfaction of creating your own stuff is amazing. Just found your channel, be patient you will blow when the algorithm of youtube decide it.
Here's a tip: You don't need to measure the screws. They're standard size. Just look up "#6 screw measurements". ISO will give you a nice chart. And here's mad-lad doing 3d printing in inches. ;-)
I´ve only designed a few tidbits but have no designer experience beyond that was really pleasant to see how efficient your workflow is compared to my terribly slow and inefficient workflow is XD
Awesome video as always! You may have already answered this, but is there a reason you use imperial instead of metric units? I’m American, but use mm for small things because it seems more precise… but obviously it works fine for you!
Thank you! I grew up in America so it’s what I’m used to. I have a pair of imperial calipers subdivided into thousandths so it’s quite accurate - it’s all just numbers at the end of the day! 😊 Though I am slowly making the transition to metric, and use both when it comes to 3D printing (layer heights, For example).
Thank you! I studied engineering in university but we learned AutoCAD - I taught myself fusion with help from some RUclips tutorials and just dove in and started designing! I am full time making videos and designing at the moment 😊
Why not just print the phone holder oriented vertically? Theoretically you could have saved the filament length of the supports if you would have just printed it vertically. since there wouldn't be a need to support the material where there is none.
@@gaminghistory101 theres also a small possibility that having the layer lines going horizontally, and screwing into them to mount it on the wall, the layers could crack apart when tightening the screw, or over time with weight pulling on the screws. The way he printed them with a big flat back plate thats far less likely to break. one way to help avoid screw points breaking apart when you have horizontal layer lines is to use dome head screws, with washers to spread the force, don't use the cone shape holes like shown here, that will just allow the screw to force the layer lines apart even more easily.... Thats one lesson i learnt early on 3d printing.
This is really cool! Wanna ask when you measure the legnth, do you give a little bit space? I am so worried about after printing the things could not fit
You’ve inspired me to try doing some of this on my own. I took a CAD class in high school so I know how to do some of the programming, but what 3d printer do you recommend for starters?
Thank you! I think the Prusa printers are great for beginners because they don’t require a lot of fiddling and allow you to start printing high quality parts, fast. However, they are expensive. I have a lot of friends who are happy with their Enders as well!
You can get an ender 3 pro from micro center for about 100 bucks if you’re lucky enough to have one near you. Just search for the current active coupon!
you should of made a pocket for your charger cable so you don't have to mess with the cable, just drop in and pull out. you should do a fusion360 for dummies video to help us that watch you do all that stuff!
Great job, though, personally I would have made the watch holder a little larger to allow the face of the watch to be more outward facing (yup a little OCD here lol), HOWEVER, a 2 or 3mm thick strip of self adhesive foam rubber strip applied to the width of the watch holder barrel would do a great job and, apply a little black colour to the watch holder itself. Maybe a little of that self adhesive foam stuff could be applied to the other parts too, to say, cushion the bottom edge of the phone etc etc...? 🤔😏 😎🇬🇧
This may be something that I've missed in life... But why does one need an ice pick (to be fair i live in Texas so if its only for the weather i think im fine)
Great video, super instructful. These projects hit the OCD in me. Good to see others out there trying to combat the chaos. #functionalprints Mahalo for sharing! : )
Hahahaha I've been making 3D printed stuff in Fusion 360 for ... I don't know, a couple years anyway.... And I never knew there was a CREATE HOLE function hahaha. Here I am drawing sketch circles and doing manual chamfers like a n00b. This is going to change my life.
In return I will give you this gift: if you want to select something that is inside or behind another object, rather than hiding the intervening objects in the tree (like hiding the body, as you do a couple times), you can just hold the left mouse button down for a couple seconds and a menu will pop up with every object your cursor intersects with.
You gave yourself away! Any murders committed in the grater Toronto area with an icepick will leave the fuzz no other choice but to render Mr. Kert a person of mostlikelydidit interest o_O
Not intending to sound critical, but if you’d printed the Phone Holder upright, you wouldn’t have needed the support. I try to eliminate it whenever I can.
Im new here and I dont know much about the channel, but why do you feel like you need to carry an ice pick with you all the time? Can someone tell me what's with that?
I'm going to be flamed for this obviously, but your use of US units really annoys me. Inches, feet, ... all just sounds so foreign to me (because of course it is). Especially for 3d printing I'd expect Americans to have finally understood the beauty of the metric system ... So, let the flaming start ...
I found that 3D printing for 4 years now I have grown accustomed to the metric system it’s just so much easier. But that hasn’t effected my love for your channel ❤️👍
Love seeing you solve all these small problems with CAD and 3D printing! It's my favorite new hobby as well
That’s awesome to hear! Thanks for watching 😊
I liked that you took the time in the intro to give the "why" of the project, the videos are much more engaging when they tell a story.
Also, the nail was great. 👍🏻
Thank you! Im really trying to make my videos more story driven.
“This brings me so much joy.” Too right!
this is definitely one of those things that is a really good lesson for people to do when learning 3d printing. Everyone's kit is different so you have to design everything yourself, problem solve it all. But its also not too complicated to design basic holders.
for a nicer finish, and a more adaptable system i'd have gone with making a few different sized of brackets, with french cleats on the tops/sides, so the idea is you can screw those brackets onto the wood, and then the different holders slide onto those cleats and clip in place, so they are locked but also removeable. That way you get a nice finish without having to have through holes on the face of everything.
I love it. I built, well sorta, its not as sophisticated, a wall holder for my stuff as well with old lcd panel and suction hooks. Its so satisfying to use something you built. So i totally get that feeling
If you run a lighter under the stringing, it usually cleans that right up
Just a little tip: You never need to measure screws. Every readily available screw is normalized, meaning that all of its measurements follow a norm. For example, a flathead M12x1.5x5 screw follows the ansi metric norm (because of the m), has a diameter of 12mm, a step of 1.5mm and a screw lenght of 5mm. All of the other measurements can be found on a "flathead screw ansi metric size chart"
Yes and no. Machine bolts made to standard.. sure, but there are so many variations of the head and other features that is better to just measure the bolt you have in hand to properly design the countersink or counterbore. Also woodscrews have even more mistery about thread diameter.. a quick caliper check sorts this unknown fast.
I find myself designing stuff to 3dprint and select the hardware from what i have on hand and design for that specific hardware i have. And boy do I have a collection of random bits and bobs (i hoard screws and bolts whenever i have, and before tossing old broken stuff i harvest screws/springs/ball bearings/etc). Better to measure my random bolt/screw than search the exact standard for the screw. Shaft dameter and thread specification if needed is available in the standard, but the head is rarely up to the standard, and the head is what counts for proper counterbores/countersunks.
I use the ISO-DIN standard mostly (i'm in Europe)
The trust in standards can be high for industrial structural bolts and nuts that in fact has the standard printed on the box (like DIN971) when new from the store. But old screws/bolts made for furniture/chipboars/electronics/cars/machinery - could have a lot of variation.. car bolts in particular are high grade bolts very true to the standard if you can pinpoint it, but otherwise they are allover or even very custom made for that aplication. I have head bolts, conrod cap bolts and nuts, suspesion arms bolts... all have weird shapes of the head and the shaft, mostly fine thread, - good luck finding the standard or the original spec for that bolt. I can still use the quirky finethread car bolts if i also have the nuts .. so measuring ensures me the correct fit rather than standards.
The standards are very good whe you design a new product without the hardware in hand, in fact you search the catalog for the right hardware for your project, design with the standard dimensions, then print/manufacture and buy the selected hardware.
@@AsiAzzy that's a valid point! In the field that I work in, we rarely have the components on hand, therefore, we can't measure them.
Also, you said that when using old repurposed screws is better to measure them, and that is completely correct! But, in this kind of application, it would be quite impractical to be repurposing old screws and see which one fits where. Therefore, if you are buying new, it's probably easier to see the normalized measurements.
wow that final shot of you putting everything away was just *chef's kiss* perfect! great inspiration for my own work space!
Thank you! Glad the satisfaction came through 😊
Thank you for this video Morley. I modified the dimensions slightly to fit my tactical flashlight, and now I have a great flashlight mount on the top of my computer hutch.
That's awesome! Thanks for watching :)
I am SO happy that someone shows the full CAD work! I really want to learn it later.
That’s great to hear! Thanks for watching 😊
You had me at “Organizing…”
That wall also brings me “so much joy” 👍🏼
Yes!! I'm excited to add some more holders to it :)
@@MorleyKert keep us updated!
The quick and dirty way to skip measuring the screw is to add them in from a database in Fusion--I normally scale up a couple percent for tolerance and use as a tool to cut. Not sure if this ends up being easier, but works for me
What a cool guy. He Just loves what he does. Bravo
I have learned so much about fusion 360 from watching you do these projects. Thanks mate
That’s so great to hear. Thanks for watching!
This was super helpful to see the design process and real time problem solving
Love the videos with the full fusion design on it. Love on easy you make it look explaining every step
Thank you, that’s great to hear!
The only thing I would do differently as add some felt to certain areas to prevent scratching with continued use. For example felt to the inside of the Letterman holder or felt to the watch drum etc.
Love how that filament looks! I have to wonder why you always carry an ice pick.
It’s a super handy tool! Check out this video: ruclips.net/video/f2AkY6Mq0l4/видео.html
Awesome, as always. I've a simple grasp of fusion (getting better the more I use it) but your videos show me the extra steps that I didn't even know existed to make designing & drawing so much easier - inputting parameters for instance.
Can I ask why you didn't print the phone holder upright? You would have avoided any support material and the front would have looked a lot cleaner without the large steps.
Thank you so much!
You know, I honestly didn't think of it until reading your comment. That's a great idea, and I should've printed it upright!
Next time :)
Nicely done! 👍👍
Thank you!
I think, I love the fact that you're so easily willing to just get the thing done and avoid nit-picky features or issues. The entire time you designed things I thought to myself "that could be so much better here, and here, and there" and it just didn't matter. You printed it anyways, I would have trashed most prints that looked close to the results of your printer. I would have spent far too much time designing PERFECT fit holders and such, but you just let it go and kept going. No fit n finish, no polish, just do the thing.
I need to do this more
the load up scene was wonderful
My favorite part 😊
For that watch stand, you could have printed just a little lip in the bottom, and kept the watch part itself separate. Tight enough that the layer lines alone create the nice snap fit.
That way you wouldn't have had to poke holes all the way through
Wonderful project! For the phone holder you could also have bought a cheap wireless charger and take the electronic out of it, integrating it into the holder so that you don't have to fiddle with the cable all the time.
Thanks! That’s a good idea - maybe I’ll integrate a wireless charger into a V2!
French cleat system would have been the way to go for more additions, less screws, easy rearranging, etc. Nice job on this though!
Next time you do a wall mounted 'storage' unit, use a French Cleat setup. No need for screws except to mount the rail. Then each of your items will be infinitely movable sideways.
And then they can fall off the cleats every time you take your knife out. I personally think French cleats are overrated for stuff that doesn’t need to be adjustable. Uses a lot more material and adds complexity to something simple. Don’t get me wrong, they have their place, but I think they are more suited to blind mounting of larger objects like a large picture frame or upper cabinet instead of the end-all solution to wall mounting. Many a sheet of plywood has been dedicated to walls full of French cleats for holders that never move.
Such a great idea - customize everything!!!
Thanks Ethan!
I really like this project because of your work im actually learning to design 3d objects in fusion 360 thanks
Thanks for watching!
Just love all of your video. Bring 3d printing to our everyday needs 👍
Thank you for the feedback! 😊❤️
Catch alls should look like pockets. From your pockets to your homes pockets!
That's why I love this one!
Instead of making screw holes that go all the way through to the front of your holders, you could’ve made screw head-sized holes on just the backside with a smaller notch above the hole like with picture hangers, etc. You would just put the screw directly into the board with the head slightly protruding and your 3D printed holder would just clip onto it.
How do you measure the strength or threshold capacity for shear or vertically strong builds? Is there a table or way to know how strong your 3d printed items are or the weight they can hold? How does this work in 3d printing? All this is new to me. Tnx!
late to the game question: could you turn your watch holder to anti-clockwise 90 degrees and use the cavity for your keys? Also why imperial all the time?
You should make one for an iPad that turns it into a sort of small TV
Oooo that’s a great idea!
Wow loved that. Makes me want to buy a 3d printer so bad. The satisfaction of creating your own stuff is amazing. Just found your channel, be patient you will blow when the algorithm of youtube decide it.
Thank you 😊❤️
Even a lighter holder I love it 👍👊
Here's a tip: You don't need to measure the screws. They're standard size. Just look up "#6 screw measurements". ISO will give you a nice chart. And here's mad-lad doing 3d printing in inches. ;-)
I´ve only designed a few tidbits but have no designer experience beyond that was really pleasant to see how efficient your workflow is compared to my terribly slow and inefficient workflow is XD
Keep practicing! Thanks for watching 😊
make me one ...i need this in my life 🤣🤣🤣🙌
Haha I think everyone needs one in their lives!
Great DIY tutorial 👍 On a side note, I want that "✋" wallet 😁
Thank you!
You can get catch alls with dividers
I really enjoyed this video. Thank you.
That’s awesome to hear, thanks for watching!
Your mom is awesome!
She is!!
Awesome video as always! You may have already answered this, but is there a reason you use imperial instead of metric units? I’m American, but use mm for small things because it seems more precise… but obviously it works fine for you!
Thank you! I grew up in America so it’s what I’m used to. I have a pair of imperial calipers subdivided into thousandths so it’s quite accurate - it’s all just numbers at the end of the day! 😊
Though I am slowly making the transition to metric, and use both when it comes to 3D printing (layer heights,
For example).
I would like to see time lapses of 3d prints being printed
Great video again. I'm interested to learn how you got to know Fusion and become skillful at it. Are you a full time designer?
Thank you! I studied engineering in university but we learned AutoCAD - I taught myself fusion with help from some RUclips tutorials and just dove in and started designing! I am full time making videos and designing at the moment 😊
Would have done the watch holder so it held the watch with a open latch. Other than that, brilliant!
Thank you!
Me encantó el tornillo!
Very cool! Well done!
Thank you!
Why not just print the phone holder oriented vertically? Theoretically you could have saved the filament length of the supports if you would have just printed it vertically. since there wouldn't be a need to support the material where there is none.
No reason other than I failed to think of it at the time!
@@MorleyKert Oh I see! Was just curious :) really enjoy your work, thanks for the reply!
Thanks for watching! 😊
@@gaminghistory101 theres also a small possibility that having the layer lines going horizontally, and screwing into them to mount it on the wall, the layers could crack apart when tightening the screw, or over time with weight pulling on the screws. The way he printed them with a big flat back plate thats far less likely to break.
one way to help avoid screw points breaking apart when you have horizontal layer lines is to use dome head screws, with washers to spread the force, don't use the cone shape holes like shown here, that will just allow the screw to force the layer lines apart even more easily.... Thats one lesson i learnt early on 3d printing.
This is really cool! Wanna ask when you measure the legnth, do you give a little bit space? I am so worried about after printing the things could not fit
This channel is on the cusp of 100k. Keep it up. It’s gonna go off sooner rather than later.
I hope so! Thanks for watching and the encouragement :)
agree! 100%
cool you cold of made some screw plugs for the board
You’ve inspired me to try doing some of this on my own. I took a CAD class in high school so I know how to do some of the programming, but what 3d printer do you recommend for starters?
Thank you! I think the Prusa printers are great for beginners because they don’t require a lot of fiddling and allow you to start printing high quality parts, fast. However, they are expensive. I have a lot of friends who are happy with their Enders as well!
You can get an ender 3 pro from micro center for about 100 bucks if you’re lucky enough to have one near you. Just search for the current active coupon!
You can make a channel just teaching Fusion.. Amazing work.
Thank you so much!
This exact use case is basically the first (and probably last) thing I'd do if I bought my own printer lol
you should of made a pocket for your charger cable so you don't have to mess with the cable, just drop in and pull out.
you should do a fusion360 for dummies video to help us that watch you do all that stuff!
And a free floating cradle inside the holder supporting the phone, with a lip on the front for your finger to pull up on, disconnecting the cable.
Receipt trick: Take a picture off it straight after buying something and then throw it away.
Great job, though, personally I would have made the watch holder a little larger to allow the face of the watch to be more outward facing (yup a little OCD here lol), HOWEVER, a 2 or 3mm thick strip of self adhesive foam rubber strip applied to the width of the watch holder barrel would do a great job and, apply a little black colour to the watch holder itself. Maybe a little of that self adhesive foam stuff could be applied to the other parts too, to say, cushion the bottom edge of the phone etc etc...? 🤔😏 😎🇬🇧
Thank you! To each their own, I like the clicky slot into place 😊
This may be something that I've missed in life... But why does one need an ice pick (to be fair i live in Texas so if its only for the weather i think im fine)
They are super handy! I think even more so than a pocket knife. Check out Jimmy Diresta’s videos
Could you do one for a handgun?
Which CAD software are you using?
Was that a 3D printed nail ;) Great work! thanks for sharing :)
Acording to Jhon Wick, pencil is more effective than ice pick.
Great video, super instructful. These projects hit the OCD in me. Good to see others out there trying to combat the chaos. #functionalprints Mahalo for sharing! : )
Thank you!
Very smart to cover your keys with tape; are you a Deviant Ollam fan, too? ;)
No cable management clips? 😋
Hahahaha I've been making 3D printed stuff in Fusion 360 for ... I don't know, a couple years anyway.... And I never knew there was a CREATE HOLE function hahaha. Here I am drawing sketch circles and doing manual chamfers like a n00b. This is going to change my life.
In return I will give you this gift: if you want to select something that is inside or behind another object, rather than hiding the intervening objects in the tree (like hiding the body, as you do a couple times), you can just hold the left mouse button down for a couple seconds and a menu will pop up with every object your cursor intersects with.
Thanks for the tip!
Are we gonna pretend that it's normal to just be running around with an ice pick on your belt? HAHA
You carry a lot of stuff in your pockets like I do 😅 makes me feel like a pack mule sometimes
You gave yourself away! Any murders committed in the grater Toronto area with an icepick will leave the fuzz no other choice but to render Mr. Kert a person of mostlikelydidit interest o_O
Very cool 😎
Thank you!
@@MorleyKert you know it pal 👍
Or get an ikea skadis and 3d print accessories for it
That’s a great idea!
Not intending to sound critical, but if you’d printed the Phone Holder upright, you wouldn’t have needed the support. I try to eliminate it whenever I can.
True! Just didn’t think of it at the time
Why do you carry an ice pick? I've never met someone that carried one before.
It’s a super useful tool, even more so than a pocket knife IMO! Check out this video: ruclips.net/video/f2AkY6Mq0l4/видео.html
This Rode Mic looks cool :)
The phone holder, if you printed that standing up, you wouldn't need support? 🤔
Also, re: Stringing -- It happens a lot with silk material. If you have a heat gun, you just need less than 10 seconds to melt them all away.
Totally, I just didn’t think of it at the time! Thanks for the tip re: the heat gun, I will definitely use that on my next print! 😊
@@MorleyKert or that lighter on the end of your tool rack would work just as well for melting the stringing off.
A lot of fun. Great project, but dear god it hurts my brain every time I hear inches in 3d printing video.
Thanks for watching!
Whats program have you used for do project?
Fusion 360
Phone, keys, wallet... ICEPICK
💯
do you know how to measure a curve?
why didnt you just print the phone holder upright, to avoid supports?
Just didn’t think of it at the time! That would’ve been a better way to go.
@@MorleyKert your screws may have just cracked apart the layer lines printing that way though.
Are we not going to talk about the ice pick!???
I have never heard someone pronounce leatherman like that 😂😂
Nice Diresta ice pick, sorry Hign Caliber Craftsman. LOL
Yes, definitely based on the Diresta design but made with love by Austin 😊
OMG es muy buena idea
Quiero hacerlo en mi casa
¡Gracias por ver!
1 drawer can be home and solve problem 😂
Casey neistat vibes 🔥
Canada uses the metric system why don't you? It's more accurate!
im going to have a fake wedding so you will make one of these.
Im new here and I dont know much about the channel, but why do you feel like you need to carry an ice pick with you all the time? Can someone tell me what's with that?
This video should answer all your questions! ruclips.net/video/f2AkY6Mq0l4/видео.html
@@MorleyKert Got it, it explains everything. But im am still going to assume you work for Mafia.
@@Gringottone 😂
You didn't 3D print the wood? UNSUBSCRIBE! 😋
😂
I'm going to be flamed for this obviously, but your use of US units really annoys me. Inches, feet, ... all just sounds so foreign to me (because of course it is). Especially for 3d printing I'd expect Americans to have finally understood the beauty of the metric system ... So, let the flaming start ...