580 models found

Thingiverse Import
...or "omelette" if you prefer.These files are for plotting an omelet recipe on eggs using an Eggbot. Use the file omelet.svg or omelet-1-serving.svg if you park the "pointy" end of your eggs at the egg motor cup. Use omelet-flipped.svg or omelet-1-serving-flipped.svg if, like me, you park the fat end of your eggs at the egg motor's egg cup. (Less slippage when you do that, eh?)Note that the text is sized such that you don't need a nano sized pen tip: I used a Sharpie Ultra Fine for the pictured egg.So how many servings for omelet.svg and omelet-flipped.svg? Those two files have a "2 serving" recipe which calls for two eggs. If you desire a more self-contained recipe, then go with the "1 serving" variants. And, if you need nutrition info, well just see http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:7232 and then mentally add in the 2 or 1 Tbsp of cream and 3/4 or 1/2 Tbsp of butter. (Butter is about 100 calories per Tbsp and there's about 50 calories per Tbsp for heavy cream [the yummy stuff].)Bon appetit! --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:8125 Original creator: dnewman

Thingiverse Import
I improved the overhangs (they are now 45°) and added mounting tabs. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5396 Original creator: nicholasclewis

Thingiverse Import
Complete set of wood typewriter keys laser engraved in 3D.Included is the original SVG file so you can edit in case you want to change the font, or make other special types of keys.If you do not have a laser cutter/engraver you can buy an already made set from our Etsy shop http://phoenixlaser.etsy.com , you can also edit the SVG file and send it to us if you want things a little different.YouTube video of one full keyboard being madehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W6BC4B2kjw --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2514 Original creator: PhoenixLaser

Thingiverse Import
The Internet is a fascinating place, providing the creative, industrious and entrepreneurial with an equal and open platform from which to be heard.Our elected Representatives have been misled to believe that the needs of a few increasingly irrelevant corporate entities outweigh all the great things a free and open Internet has brought to the world.Join us in reminding our congressional delegations that by altering the rules to protect the few, they will close the door on so many infinite possibilities the future may have held.The rule of thumb is that a letter is 100X the value of a phone call. If a 2D action gets a 100X multiplier, then a 3D action could get 1000X the multiplier.Please print this coin, and mail it to your Senator and Congressman http://contactingthecongress.org/ --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:16122 Original creator: MakerBot

Thingiverse Import
"Aggh, brain freeze! Oohhh... ahhh! Oh Jesus, that hurt!"After a little cleaning, his lobes are a great business card holder!Inspired by BrainyWalt http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:828, here's BrainyColbert! --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:9155 Original creator: TeamTeamUSA

Thingiverse Import
This things will keep your RAMPS from flopping around until you get a proper enclosure printed. It clamps onto the bottom threaded rod of the frame and will fit 5/16" or m8. It also includes two little brackets for mounting a fan above the board to keep your pololus cool. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:6630 Original creator: wilson

Thingiverse Import
The original didn't work with the servos I had on hand, and I wanted to be able to add more articulation and improve bits without having to start over from scratch. Thus: the Modular Hexapod.The dovetail tongue and groove design was inspired by the Simple Spool System for Makerbot http://www.thingiverse.com/derivative:5005 I wanted to be able to switch out parts as I improve them and to avoid absolute positioning. Video of my first configuration in action: http://www.flickr.com/photos/moleofproduction/5318014248/More videos w/ creepiness cranked up to 11:http://www.flickr.com/photos/moleofproduction/5331316152/http://www.flickr.com/photos/moleofproduction/5330707869/http://www.flickr.com/photos/moleofproduction/5331321724/I used the nifty Pololu Micro Maestro x6 servo controller and 4 AAA batteries to get things moving.Skull attachment adapted from: http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4378 printed w/ MakerGear .25 nozzle. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5454 Original creator: moleofproduction

Thingiverse Import
This is a replacement for the plastic conveyor that comes with the makerbot thingimatic ABP. Simply it replaces the plastic conveyor with a strip of Titanium foil. Titanium foil may be difficult for the average person to find, but it is available for purchase online and the results are worth the initial investment. Other high strength metal foils like zirconium or tungsten would probably work similarly. It seems to last nearly forever too, I've run several hundred prints on the same small strip of metal without any noticeable wear. Titanuim foil is an ideal platform material because:1) Unlike aluminum foil it does not normally crinkle and maintains a smooth flat shiny surface unless deliberately creased. It it actually somewhat springy.2) It is flexible like a sheet of paper and rolls smoothly through the mechanism3) The coefficient of thermal expansion is much lower than plastic over the temperature ranges used, therefore although the plastic will adhere nicely when hot, when both are cooled the plastic shrinks more than the surface beneath it and pops right off.4) It is physically extremely tough and will survive a lot of abuse5) It is chemically inert and immune to solvents The titanium build surface is immune to solvents, and this allows a unique sort of raft-less printing. Essentially what you do is use waste plastic dissolved in acetone to rapidly paint on a thin film that helps the first print layer stick. This has the key benefit of conserving useful material and saving the time needed to print a raft. I've had a great deal of success with this using ABS plastic, never tried it with any other plastic. So far using this technique my prints have shiny smooth bottom surfaces and no warping or pre-mature detachment or slumping type defects. I've never had to abort a print due to a failed first layer and it's pretty much my main method now. If you want to print normally with a raft, the film is not needed and the raft adheres very well to the metal.EDIT: It seems like other people have used the scrap plastic-acetone method before on metal build platforms, didn't realize that when I came up with it. As far as I know this is still the only metal build surface that rotates and functions like the original conveyor belt though. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:7460 Original creator: tmartin

Thingiverse Import
This is a World of Warcraft horde weapon I ve found on this great paper-craft site a while ago.http://wowpapercraft.blogspot.com/2007/10/ripsaw.html (french)I've build it from paper in large scale and did an intervetion in public space with it in 2008 - full details here http://datenform.de/1heng.htmlWould love to see this printed! :-)Pleas find also the pepakura file and pdf paper builing instructions below. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5902 Original creator: agoasi

Thingiverse Import
This drawing is less demanding of plotting precision than an earlier, similar version I have posted. This version fully draws each local region of the egg before moving on to the next region. While this makes the plotting time a bit slower (but not by much), it reduces the amount of plotting precision needed. (The prior version of this drawing was optimized for speed but made the egg go through many full back and forth revolutions.)If you still have plotting precision issues, you can slightly stretch the drawing horizontally by, say, 5 pixels. (If that's not enough, then iterate by stretching again.) Just select layer "2 - black", select all in layer, and then use Object > Transform. In the Transform sub-window, use the "Scale" tab and set the units to "px" (pixels). You may see that the initial width isn't exactly 3200 pixels: that's because (1) the drawing is wider than 3200 pixels as it wraps around the egg, and (2) Inkscape takes into account the stroke width of the lines.Alternatively, you can remove a column or two from the drawing if you are having plotting precision issues. The result still looks quite nice.For plotting on spheres, you will need to rescale the vertical component of the drawing: it is presently squashed vertically so as to make it suitable for plotting on eggs. Rescale the vertical dimension by 100% / (0.666666 * 0.95) or 157.89%.The SVG files pattern-20.svg and pattern-16.svg have, respectively, 20 or 16 "stars" running horizontally around the egg. Thus the -20 file has more stars. The interactive Python script pattern.py may be used to generate additional SVG files with whatever density of stars you'd like, and with or without vertical compression for eggs. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5953 Original creator: dnewman

Thingiverse Import
The simple object to test the maximum overhang 3D printer can deal with. The angles are, top to bottom:90°80°90°70°90°60°90°180°90°55°90°50°90°45°90°40°90°35°90°30°90°In short, the bottom part is 80,70,60 that should work on every machine and the top part is 55-30 in 5° steps so you can then find what overhead angles you can "live with", what the "good" ones are and what angles are unprintable.EDIT:I have now added also a test_overhang_flat.stl after imho valid comment that overhang on the round and flat surface is not same, so here's the one to test the flat overhang.One side (right) is 60, 55, 50, 45° (with 90° in between) and other side (left) is 40,35,30,25,20° (with 90° in between). --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1169 Original creator: BogdanKecman

Thingiverse Import
Nice test piece for a Makerbot and it looks cool to boot!This is version 2. The printed part pictured was version 1. V1 had some sections that were a little too small and chunks broke off while I was cleaning up the part. V2 should solve this problem. --- Imported from Thingiverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1665 Original creator: msruggles