Adam Savage Builds His 3D Print Farm!
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- Опубликовано: 25 июл 2023
- Adam can not get enough of 3D printing prop parts on his Bambu X1C, so the next step in his obsession is to set up a second printer and start building out his mini print farm at the cave! Adam constructs a cabinet to house his printers as well as store and dry filament, and we can already see more 3D printers entering Adam's build workflow in the near future!
Bambu Lab X1C 3D printer: www.matterhackers.com/store/l...
MANITYA Small Dehumidifier for Bedroom 580 sq ft: amzn.to/473UXFw
Adam Savage Temporary Ruler Tattoo: tested-store.com/products/ada...
Extended Scene (Member Exclusive): Cutting and Assembling the Storage Stand: • Cutting and Assembling...
Shot by Adam Savage and edited by Josh Self
Music by Jinglepunks
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Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman
Thanks for watching!
#adamsavage #onedaybuilds #3dprinting Наука
Bambu Lab X1C 3D printer: www.matterhackers.com/store/l/bambu-lab-x1-carbon-combo-3d-printer/sk/M80GDCL5?aff=7553
MANITYA Small Dehumidifier for Bedroom 580 sq ft: amzn.to/473UXFw
Adam Savage Temporary Ruler Tattoo: tested-store.com/products/adam-savages-temporary-ruler-tattoo
Extended Scene (Member Exclusive): Cutting and Assembling the Storage Stand: ruclips.net/video/oQekR6_pu7Q/видео.html
You should add a rope to each side and hold the screen at is maximum extension and a handle to it, like a tube hole for a finger
You should really call out the links when they're an affiliate link. We don't want our favorite maker getting in trouble with FTC
Would be nice if all the measurements for this table where posted it looks like the right size for a spot I have at home lol
Did you find the encryption code to the extremely large log files it produces, when you need support?
Do you know what data they leech from your computer?
No?
Why do you then advertise for them? I mean. They don’t explode or anything, so what’s the attraction?
After the dry box maybe a couple diagonal braces for the Cobra stand, you're probably getting resonance issues on short, fast, movements that can be remedied.
I love the temporary tattoo idea!
It definitely had some electric boogaloo moves going on lol
Spend a little time with a tape measure and measure various parts of your hands and arm. Thumbnail 3/4" wide. 1" between knuckle and index finger tip. Palm width=4". Stretched out hand, 10" little finger tip to thumb tip. etc. You can estimate smaller distances from there, and be at least as accurate as a tattoo.
What temporary tattoo are you talking about?
@@randomhero123 Adam says he's selling temporary tattoos of his ruler tattoo on his arm.
Definitely, the stand wobbling gave me shivers. :)
I’m so excited that Adam is digging in on 3D printing. Watching his videos helped me expand to other medians like wood and metal working. Now I can’t wait to see what his projects incorporating more 3D prints are going to be. Let’s go!
@@bsblleon01 Yeah that's what I typed on my phone but it changed it...made me question myself...so I left it lol. (edit...I added this--->) After all, if Adam has the balls to show us his mistakes why not all of us, right?
@@bsblleon01 so what
I turn 50 this year and my printer(Prusa MK3 kit) purchase nearly 4 years ago gained me one of the coolest tools I've ever owned. Throw in learning Fusion360 and the sky is the limit.
My enclosure/setup: ruclips.net/video/aSRbxvf90oE/видео.html
Tested has been a resource for 3d printers for 9 or 10 years, the fact Adam is finally bringing them into his workshop speaks to the ease of use and productivity with the new Bambu Labs disrupting the market
@@bsblleon01 Media
I love that he's like the rest of us. Even with that shop and all those tables, he's still building the cabinet on the floor.
and, at 26:03 you can see why the rest of us would have done most of that assembly at bench height. Those *old* knees hurt like crikey ;)
I was also a bit surprised he is willingly making it so low :) ... Im way younger and I would not want to access it down there either :D
We all suffer from horizontalitus. Any clear horizontal surface needs something on it to restore a lumpy topographic texture.
Old timers (i.e. 'experienced') build things on the floor because there's less chance of dropping something that bounces away.
I appreciate how he also says 'ow' like the rest of us at 25:58
Of all Adam's many skills, I think perhaps the one I envy most is his ability to know when to fix a screw up properly, and when to just shove a couple of bits of ply on each side when your measurements are way out, and still be happy with the end result. Not getting hung up on imperfections that don't matter is a massively underrated talent. Kudos!
AGREED
Thank you for showing your process. As a builder of stage scenery for many years, it is validating to know that I am not the only one who builds with this style of workflow.
do yourself a favor and build it into a closed area, the noise and smells can be bad. I added charcoal filters to keep the fumes down, and an extra smoke detector. I used a walk in closit for the three printers. Most are not that noisy, but all of them with all the fans and motors running was too much.....
i grew up watching this wonderful guy on tv, learned a lot about science. seeing all the cool stuff he continues to do is inspiring. its good to see Adam stays active and continues to teach us new things.
Adam, one thing you’ll find with multiple Bambus is the need for vibration isolation. As you know they really whip around and 2 printing at once on one surface *can* cause issues. Maybe something as simple as dampened sheet of foam under each printer. Cool build though!
Indeed. I have 3, and this is a problem 🙂
I’ve found the easiest way to eliminate vibration is by adding mass to the platform my printer sits on and to affix the printer to that platform. We had a piece of 2cm granite left from our kitchen remodel that I had the installers cut to fit on the top of my table and then I drilled holes carefully in it to mount the printer based through to the bottom. Not only did it decrease the noise and keep each printer from affecting each other during multiple prints but the discrete prints were far more clean in output. Good luck! And Great Build!
@@chrisstephan4520 ah, this explains why I see so many printers sitting on concrete spacers from the hardware store.
Yea. Get some anti vibration foam for washing machines. They are perfect in the 3d printing world
one of the best things for reducing resonance is a dense mass. 3D printing farms often place printers directly onto a concrete base. You can do things like high density foam or the classic squash ball feet, but these will only reduce noise and not resonances that can ruin your prints, and even input shaping won't resolve
Building a 3d printer station for my house is on my list of projects this next year. Glad to see what Adam is doing so I can get some ideas for what I want/need in my own space.
Congrats Mr.Savage! Welcome to the wonderful world of 3D printer ownership. It's an amazing tool. Been printing since 08' and still love it. Just got a Anycubic photon mono M5s this week so I'll be putting that through some tests this week to see what it can do. So excited for you and us viewers to see what you come up with.
I have a lot of 3D printers in my shop currently along with other tools. Seeing videos like this help me think of ways to incorporate new ideas to maybe make my makerspace a little better each time.
Always great to see 3D printers getting the love and furniture they deserve!
Nice build. The dehumidifier will do a good job of maintaining the filament, but a roll that's already absorbed moisture will need heat and air movement to correct the issue. A cheap food dehydrator does a great job.
Never assume that filament straight out of the bag is dry. You don't know the local conditions when it was packed.
I look forward to seeing FDM parts starting to turn up in your builds.
That was my thought. Might as well just use desiccant and save power on running a dehumidifier full time.
I love the enthusiasm with the measurements and quick brainstorm when the thought of a drawer *AND* a cabinet came across Adam's mind!😂
Just pure joy exuded from that man in every capacity!
It like he pulled it out of thin air........this gentleman's ability to create is astounding!
Fun to watch your 3D printing journey, I love my Bambu P1P, my favorite 3D printer out of the many I have, and the Bambu is now my go-to workhorse
I like how you adopted the technology. I always watch your channel for inspiration and now I feel we share a passion.
Thanks for keep the flame of invention alive Adam
It's so wonderful seeing Adam being excited for new things during planning, building and finishing of a project.
Even though you are building a "solid" table for your 3D printers, do this hack: Get two paver/patio blocks from the big box store and put your printers on them. It's a $20 purchase that will improve your 3D printers 20 fold! Not just the print quality but the sound as well. Anchoring your printers to these blocks also helps. (Maybe another video?)
It will not make any difference for the Bambu ones. That works for cheap entry level printers that are flimsy, light weight, bed swingers with no input shape.
You are absolutely incorrect. Mass applies to everything. Basic physics. @@MuitoDaora
@@TheexplorographerWill not present any noticeable difference in print quality in the Bambu.
Okay. I own one and can tell you that it does. Along with 10 other printers in my farm. And I manufacture tech mounting brackets with them. At speed, there is a noticeable difference in ringing and overall quality. Not to mention the sound benefits. Here is the bottom line, I am offering up free advice to Adam and his team and anyone else who wants it. If you don't want it, fine. NOBODY asked you for your opinion though. So, be a troll if you must. But, know that you are not contributing with your noise. @@MuitoDaora
@@Theexplorographer I'm not being a troll. I have a Core XY and didn't notice any difference in quality when I did it to mine. Only noticed improvement for the bed swingers.
Good to know, live and learn. If works for any printer then fine.
Adam, I always love your videos. I love watching your process. The best thing I have found though to store filament is one of those large (I think it is a 156 quart ?) air tight IRIS boxes. Add in two reusable Eva-dry units and you basically have a hermetically sealed dry box that needs almost zero electricity to store filament. The easiest way for long term storage of filament that I have found. You can store 20+ rolls in one box.
awee.. adam adam adam... sometimes your channel hits my feed and im envious of your lab every time :) keep it up my man
I LOVE my X1C Carbon Condo.... I printed the baskets that install between the spools of the AMS. They hold a good amount of the rechargable dessicant! A really great addition!!!
Cool to see the person that inspired me to get into STEM (as a career and as a hobby) get into my recent-ish hobby of 3D printing.
Big hugs. Thanks for being you.
It’s cool watching your shop grow, improve, and integrate new technology.
Omg that printer wobbling around at 30:35 can't be good! Great job with the stand, I want one now
Adam, you're awesome! You're the reason why I got into 3d modeling. Mythbusters was the highlight of my wonder years. Also I noticed that your anycubic stand was shaking at the time stamp of 30:19. I'm sure someone has mentioned it as well, but it will cause layers to shift and warp. It may not matter as much for some functional prints. I'm sure you will deduce the cause after your first inspection but i wanted to just share that with you because of all the knowledge you have shared with us. Thanks for everything!
Can't wait to follow Adam's 3D Printing journey! 😌
Always inspiring to learn from his wisdom.
Oh I am - building the dry box. Printer table already done
I modified a old walmart LCD stand to hold my printers and printer controlling pc/monitor, but I love the idea of using the bottom area for filament vs the top where I normally kept them, going to grab some plexiglass and whip this up asap, I could even get away with a 2nd row now with this idea combined with my current setup!!! EXCENLLENT!
Omg I just bought one of these printers after using half a dozen Prusa printers for my farm for years I wanted something new and a bit more fun and refined now and I have to say I love it so far and now instead of only printing parts and things i design and sell this has made me want to have more FUN with printing as its faster and easier and more functional so I have been printing fun stuff lately for a change. I was in the mood to watch something 3d printing wise and low and behold this video pops up! Perfect!
Nice hearing aid Adam. Took me years to talk my father into getting his. Wear it proudly brother. Keep on making King Maker dude.
I am 76YO and wood/metal working for 60 years with Grizzly/Craftsman quality tools. Never reach your level of skills/equipment but good enough to appreciate your work.
You have provided me endless hours of happiness watching Myth Busters and now your YT videos. I do some 3D printing on CR10S and Ender3 V2 printers, so I appreciate this particular video too. So great to see how well you do things. Thanks for the happy times!👍
I hope we get a follow up on if that dehumidifier works, looks like the typical thermoelectric type. I bought one of those types and it just doesn't grab that much water from the air. In a small room it only collected about a cup of water a day, didn't change the humidity level at all. It was a waste of $100. Maybe it will work in a small sealed space but I have my doubts. I put my filament spools in large zip lock bags and then add one or two large desiccant packs and one of those color changing strips. Once a year I need to spend an afternoon regenerating the packs when the strips show greater than 20% humidity in the bags.
The industrial 3D printer we have at work stands on a cabinet much like yours (but in steel), with dehumidifier & UPS built in. You might want to consider adding a small UPS to this build.
Thank you, Adam years ago on TV , you were a genius, now years later you are spectacular, Adam it shows that you have been trained by very talented people you should be commended for many years of work at many profession's you are needed by many keep up the great work
I look in people’s garages sometimes, notice no tools or other things that preclude getting a vehicle in said space, and wonder “how do they tinker? What do these people do with their time? What if they want to build something or repair something?” I love the process of “tinkery” as I call it, and I’m thankful for a garage full of tools with which to do it. Really nice build - I’ve been looking at 3D printers and will definitely use your ideas for my cabinet for it/them.
See, I look in garages with tools and what not and think - no, get them out and make space - im a wargamer and my garage currently has a big table and shelves full of model soldiers :-) Fixing things ? That's what kitchens are for !
Bambu's vibrate like crazy. Build some rubber into the base your setting them on. They even recommend their anti vibration legs for two printers next to each other.
The cement paver slab from lowes is the preferred base amongst the faithful.
I put a layer of hard foam with cement paver on top as my printer base. It really does help with vibration. Some sorbathane pads on my X1s feet help even more.
Do NOT do this. See the other comment on here about Patio block and adding mass to your printers stand. Connecting your printer to that mass is key. Rubber vibration dampers are not the answer here.
@@OhThatAD works perfectly for me. There are many iterations, combinations, and ways to accomplish this
Yay another one day build, thanks Adam and the Tested team.
Thank you for watching and commenting!
Adam,
You should consider adding an analog barometer to the dry cabinet. Those little digital barometers work fine but require batteries. You could also add a digital barometer wired into your power strip with an additional readout mounted to the outside so it would be easy to monitor. Within your shop, the best place I can see for your 3D printers would be in your loft. That should isolate them from as many vibrations as possible so you can still use your shop normally while printing.
I've been using two of the exact same barometers for over a year straight and they're still going fine lol. Battery replacements are negligible
I would also recommend locating on the opposite side of the cabinet so the reading isn’t effected by the out-flow of the dehumidifier.
I would also recommend some sort if outside container to collect any discharge from the humidifier. Opening the door daily will change the air inside and make the humidity go up and down. Storing liquid water in a dry area with changing temps can lead to evaporation. Both are counter productive.
These are changes I would consider.
Building this! I think I'm going to try to make mine so I can feed one spool directly to the printer (mounting above). Thanks Adam for the awesome idea!
Congrats Adam,
This is my favorite 3d printer,
Own a single X1C with two AMS units.
Agreed, I love that printer has been amazing
putting a paving stone or something heavy on top of your table and then something shock absorbing on top of that below your printer really helps, I've seen carpet underlayment foam or even insulation, really helps prevent wobble. Not sure how it'd help higher end printers but it's done wonders for my cheap Ender.
It will be interesting to see how stable it is when the high speed prints are running. I had a loose fitting metal one that started wobbling with my Creality K1 running. The K1 seemed to “feed” the vibrations/wobbling of the work bench. Laurie. NZ.
Hey Adam! Long-time fan, and we finally have the same tools! :)
I also have two Bambu X1Cs. (Yes, impatient 😁). I love them! It's been fun watching you get into the 3D printers and watching you build your set up.
Thanks for the great videos and MTFBWY!
Erasure (Art. 17 GDPR)
Right:
You may request us to erase certain of your personal data. For example, you can ask us to erase the personal data:
which is no longer needed by us in relation to the purpose for which they were collected or otherwise processed;
(So... if they collected it for the purpose of "keeping it forever", they can keep it forever.)
In certain situations, Bambu Lab is unable to delete your personal data in responding to your requests, including:
when such personal data is still necessary to be processed to achieve the purpose we collected it for;
(You mean like... keeping it forever?)
Bambu Lab’s interest in using the data overrides your interest in having it deleted (e.g., when we need to process the personal data to protect our services from fraud);
(Or... their interest in keeping it forever?)
Bambu Lab has a legal obligation to keep relevant personal data; or
(This may sound crazy, but this is a China-based company that is at the legal whims of China's policies. If their government told them to keep all data collected forever, they'd legally have to keep it... FOREVER.)
(Here's to hoping you don't have customers who expect you to keep their data secure!)
I'm so glad Adam got over the hump of getting into 3D printing. Such a great tech and I'm looking forward to the creative applications! I'm totally copying this project, by the way.
I'm so excited to see what you make because i bought and started printing the x1c about 3 weeks ago!
I just brought my first Bambu lab printer yesterday i brought a P1S I’m very excited for this printer as it’s unlike any 3D printer I’ve used before
I got an x1c a few months ago, absolutely love it.
I love our Bambu Labs X1 Carbon with AMS. Such a great printer. Had some issues with the AMS but the main printer is almost bulletproof after solid weeks of printing high speed prints
The AMS has some known issues that the community has addressed, including printable filament guides so they wear out before the AMS standard ones start to wear.
You could even add some sealed ptf tubing ports on the back of the cabinet, and the filament can feed from inside the low humidity box directly into the printers.
i was just thinking about what kind of 3d printers Adam used while at work, get home and here this Vid is. A wizard with the conventional stuff, with 3d printing its gonna be some real black magic. unlimited kitbashing works!
I love putting on adam’s videos while I paint and stuff it’s nice company and super nostalgic because my grandpa and I used to watch myth busters when I was younger
A nice project , the one, thing I'd do differently would be have the rails run front to back, and probably have them hung from the top on slides you could pull them forward on, to access. Then you have the whole floor of the dry box for the packaged filaments, you could even put a sliding shelf for them to make finding then easier. A bit more complicated but it seems a lot better than, as I'd have to do, go down on my knees to use the back storage rail.
I love that Adam is getting so invested into 3-D printing!
Adam, depending on who you get your filament from, it is actually going to be better if you do take it out and let the filament dry out in the new cabinet. Even with being vacuum packed, I have found that since the major supply shortages of 2021/22 filament has been coming a bit "wetter" and I suspect it is a result of pushing production times up and filament getting limited time to dry and sit in inventory.
I noticed that as well. I have not scientifically tested it, but a fresh role direct from box usually has the crackling/popping sound of evaporating water during printing and produces more stringing compared to one stored in my 20% humidity drybox for a few days.
As someone who has produced his own filament I find this a very strange phenomenon. It is really hard to produce good quality, consistent diameter filament
with "moist" plastic. I would expect right after it was produced it should be "dry" and would stay dry if you vacume packed it in a timely fashion.
Any particular materials you stood out while you experienced this?
Very curious!
@@migael92 I noticed it most with PETG Prusament, since that's the most I use. I wonder if the filament picks up water during the cooling baths after the extrusion.
Bought my X1 last week and am now building my own “workers space” in my home thank you for the inspiration Adam!!!
I've been 3d printing at work for the past 25 years, and printing at home for the past 6. I now own two bambu P1P's and thinking about buying a third. I have to say it's the first printer I can honestly say is a game changer. Plug n play, workhorse, no issues.. perfect print every time. My only wish is that they would release a bigger version.
Heyy! I love to see the Bambu X1C Family! Best printer I've had by par. A single printed replaced 5 in my farm
Bambu is great on most of normal parts. But as we tested out a few high complexity and large scale models in the studio, it starts encountering troubles due to the high-speed printing pace and seems require custom setups for specific types of architecture. It will be great to develop an AI module to reduce failures.
We've been loving our Bambu X1C's! I think you'll be thrilled with the printer.
sealing up the inside joints of the cabinet, and weatherseal around the plexiglass (improve the air-tight-ness) will improve the dryness it can obtain.
advice from long time 3D printer: securely mount the cart so that it can't move in X or Y AND get some soft (TPU) feet for each X1C. that'll isolate each printer's resonances from the other so that they don't influence each other's prints and cause artifacts while they're printing at the same time. i just went through this process for my printers and found that this combination of a rigid, unmoving surface + dampener feet yielded the best results in my resonance tests (measured with an accelerometer for input shaper testing). also, keep some color changing desiccant in your drybox. it'll suck the remaining moisture out of the air in there and you'll know when it needs to be dried. a cheap food dehydrator will work for that.
My one mod would be to add a Spool Holder that allows me to hang a spool inside to feed any printer. I'd print a TPU plug to seal the exit hole when not in use. Plus, I'd be able to swap around spools inside the cabinet while leaving the existing color(s) on the printer.
Table looks nice! Maybe a bit of foam weather strip on the edges of the acrylic and silicone to seal up the chamber. Also, I actually would take the filament out of the wrapping. Most of it is processed in water to cool it when it is extruded so really isn’t that dry inside the bags to start with.
I built the resin curing box he did and it's been fantastic. Only thing that can take my massive dragon prints from my Jupiter. Always glad to see more builds!
I have a Jupiter and a Saturn and have smoked glass doors on each, along with odour control system to vent outside.
A person with the right tools and hands can do and make Anything. Adam will show you how.
I work for my local college as an instructor for our 3D printers / additive manufacturing program. 3D printers are the next generation of craft making, prototyping, and fixing things. I have repaired many things at the college for a couple of bucks and saved hundred. I also have designed a tank with 8 separate treads and 3D printed it out(video of its first prototype on my channel), and then wired it up and it works beautifully. I have made remakes of old vintage car parts that no one manufactures anymore as well. 3D printing does almost everything. I hope you, Adam, know of the near limitless capabilities there are with these 3D printers because with your brain, brilliant things will happen once the ball gets rollin.
Gotta love the X1C, godsend for people just starting in the 3d print world!
Great video, woodworking is my hobby and when building cabinets for my shop I do the same thing, initial dimensions and then run on the fly. Yeah you can buy it but it's way more satisfying building it yourself, not to mention the difference in quality.👍
Running 2 Carbon printers together, you may want to pick up Anti-Vibration Feet from Bambu, or print some from TPU.
The X1C compensates for it's own vibrations, but not that of their neighbor(s).
i just started getting back into 3d printing too, i'm glad you're on the adventure as well!
I love the Kobra Max! My Aerospace Engineering class I’m taking got one of those last year and it’s been so incredibly useful and cool to play with.
Recently purchased an Anycubic Viper and I am also working on setting up a 3D printing station. Also have a Resin printer. Will eventually have a Cobra Max and an X1C as well.
Adam I love your vibe! I hope someday you'll take a trip up to see our workshop in Ontario Canada! Also - we built welding fixture tables recently and you need one in your life!
@Adam Savage, If you source longer cables and PTFE tube, you can fit the AMS units in the cabinet. Cables are Molex 6 Way Female Micro-Fit 3.0
He builds at such a pace! Great to see the process
Good choice. Not on the Anycubic but on the Bambu.
I've been in this hobby since 2015 and nothing has impressed me more than the bambu's
That AnyCubic Kobra will have horrible ghosting with that amount of vibration in the stand. May also want to lock your new cabinet in place with chocks.
Amazing to watch, thanks Adam!
It's great to see Adam leaning into 3D printing, it can really accelerate things. I absolutely LOVED Adam's unintentional(?) lead-in to the build montage music. It would be awesome if that became a 'thing' for his build videos. I'm reminded of this from the Peter Pan stage play:
HOOK: Shh, I must think!
JUKES: What tempo, Captain?
HOOK: A tarantella!
SMEE [to crew]: A tarantella!
HOOK: [breaks into song]
Lol That's awesome. I've been eyeing the Carbon since it came out (I'm a 3d Printing super nerd) and have modded an Ender 3 to its literal limits. There is no way within my lifetime, where I could save, let alone justify buying one - and Adam ordered two. All the best of them, Adam.
Nice printer!
I got a new printer also. And it’s also the Bambu x1C with the AMS..
It’s a great printer for the printer community!
I owe the X1-C as well, great machine, you may want to add some rubber brakes to the cart because of the the resonance tuning the printer does. Or add concrete blocks with rubber pads under each printer. The X1-C will can and will move that table you built
He's 3D printing!! Welcome to the club! Can't wait to see what mods you come up with for your printers. Direct filament feed from your humidor, etc. Also interested what CAD/CAM software you use for modelling your parts. Best wishes!
I was all of two minutes into this when I fell asleep today. This channel brings me so much calm and peace.
Very excited to see where this goes!
It's a great video and idea I really liked the cabinet you built. Definitely Great work! I have a suggestion to help the dehumidifier you might use sealing strip around the door and also you can put a handle on it.
All I can think about is how much Grant would've loved all this, been a kid in a candy shop with all this 3d printing how he could make all his robot parts. I never met the guy but it really hurts that we lost such a amazing mind and person. Rest in piece Grant you're missed.
One day Id love to talk design and shop with you guys!
And I hate to be that guy but....having both those printer side by side is going to make vibrations causing issues. Best bet make some sort of rubber feet that absorb that vibration.
Interesting how you almost finish and set all up only to then start the acrobatics with the drawer installation. Usually people measure and install all the fixtures before final assembly. But it seems to be working for you. So, good job and a nice desk/cabinet.
Hey Adam, missed this video so really excited to start it, skip to the end, see the final result, then go back to the start and watch it properly!
I hope silent operation is not on the "must have" list ans you just built a huge sound box/acoustic chamber) for your printer which will amplify the sounds made by the motors a LOT more than you would think. The best place for a filament printer to sit is on a solid surface (Concrete slap etc)
(I too have 2 X1C + AMS sitting side by side) - Also while I only have my 2 on a dedicated wood table too there are those who put a concrete slab under each printer for vibration dampening
Love it. The temp tatoo is briant. You should put the offer about 70% in and you will get more engagement with it. Time to build. Thanks for the inspiration.
23:35 Thank you for your review and endorsement of the Paul Smith briefs. I had never heard of this brand. I think I'll buy a pair.
I was inspired by yours, and had a ruler tattood on my forearm as well, use it all the time!
As a an idea for you Adam, add a heavy walking stone or concrete square under the printer it will help with vibration dampening and stability for your printers as well.
Thanks for all the great videos
Heck yeah! Excited to see more printing projects from Adam!
Just took him a while!!!!
Mornings are for coffee and quiet contemplation... or watching Adam make stuff! :D
I'm love seeing that you are expanding into 3d printing! I cannot wait to see how you tie it to the workflow of your shop and projects!
It's so strange that you haven't gotten into 3D printing sooner! Being a maker and all. I can't think of another device that gives such a massive boost to a multitude of hobbies. I got into it about three years ago and now have 4 printers and 1 resin printer with a washing station. It's so much fun and I believe that whatever skills you pick up when designing stuff in CAD and solving unusual problems is going to be very useful going forward.
It took Adam a bit but he’s now a fan!
If you swap out the back rails for a piece of steel rod with skater bearings on and poke a few holes (say3-4mm) in the top at the back, with a few spacers (washers/clips) you can run non AMS runnable filament straight out of the De-Humidified storage without loosing in much high water content air in.