3d Printers
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3d Printers
Hi All,
I have been a member here for quite a while, but am yet to respond to many posts.
I find some of the work done here just amazing.
Anyway moving onto my question.
I have been looking at some 3D printers. The cheapest printer I have found is this one from the bay of evil
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/181075082262 ... 1423.l2649
I have been trying to find some reviews, of either this type or the maker bot, so does anybody out there have any advice or reviews.
I have been a member here for quite a while, but am yet to respond to many posts.
I find some of the work done here just amazing.
Anyway moving onto my question.
I have been looking at some 3D printers. The cheapest printer I have found is this one from the bay of evil
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/181075082262 ... 1423.l2649
I have been trying to find some reviews, of either this type or the maker bot, so does anybody out there have any advice or reviews.
- Johnnycrash
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Don't waste your time or money on any of these "home" 3D printer systems. They are cheap for a reason. They will not produce ANYTHING even remotely useful for scale modeling (if that's your goal).
Unless you have $100,000.00+ (some I have seen for as little $60K, but then by the time you add in the accessories you need... $100K again).
Just save up, and farm it out to the hundreds of 3D printing houses out there.
Unless you have $100,000.00+ (some I have seen for as little $60K, but then by the time you add in the accessories you need... $100K again).
Just save up, and farm it out to the hundreds of 3D printing houses out there.
John Fleming
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
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Re: 3d Printers
First off, what do you want it for?Halk wrote:I have been trying to find some reviews, of either this type or the maker bot, so does anybody out there have any advice or reviews.
Next, what do you expect it to do?
It might be of some use, depending upon what your expectations are. Especially if they are low.
Well, that's never going to happen because a 2D image doesn't have the 3D information needed to make a 3D part. It simply doesn't. Now, if the image is keyed to a 3D file, that's something different...Someday we will be able to throw an image into the printer, specify the size, and press print...and bam we can get a 3d copy.
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
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It has nothing to do with technology. A 2D image can not have the information necessary to create a 3D image, if it did, it would be a 3D image.josdiaz wrote:Never say never...especially with future tech coming in the next 20 years
The same way a true greyscale image can never be turned into a true colour photo. The grey image simply does not carry the information needed to establish the true colours.
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
- Johnnycrash
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If you'll calm down I'll tell you...josdiaz wrote:Why couldn't future printer take a 2d image and extrapolate it into a 3d version then print that? WHY I ASK YOU!!!
The 2D image does not have depth information in it. It also has no information on the other side of the object in the image of parts of the object not captured in the image. The human brain does a wonderful job interpolating information from an image coupled with other things we already know. We still can't know about parts of an image we can't actually see, but we think we know it and, if we know the subject well, we are usually correct.
But the information contained in any single 2D image simple does not extend to those parts of thde object not actually in the image. Now, as I said, if the 2D image is tied via a "smart" computer system to 3D models of the subject, then showing the printer an image of a, say, Starfury, would allow the computer to say, "hey, he wants a Starfury model" and go pick the Starfury 3D file from storage and print that. But that's not the same as shoving a 2D image into the printer and having it print exactly that object from the image without referencing a previously stored file. The totality of the 3D object data is just not contained in the 2D image.
Now, a super duper intelligent computer could see a 2D image of, say, a chair and print you a model of that chair with all the visible characteristics of the chair in the image, but it would never know that you, as a 5 year old, carved your name in the far side of that chair because the information that defines that carved name is not in the image taken from the opposiite side.
Does that make sense?
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
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Because the information does not exist for any computer to do anything with. If the information is not there a computer would have to invent it (also known as interpolating) and the "smarter" the computer or person is, the better the guesses and invention are, but you still can't _know_ information that isn't there.josdiaz wrote:But why can't a future computer take the 2d image and turn it into a 3d image? How do we know a computer 20 or 30 years from now can't do that?
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
- Joseph Osborn
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It is true a single 2D image does not contain enough information to create a 3D model. But take an array of several 2D images of an object from different angles and you can turn that data into a 3D model.
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
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True, however, for complicated objects, the number of images needed to capture something like, for instance, the details of an afterburner exhaust can and it's actuators, would require a lot of images, all with some way to reference each other to provide accurate distance information. But it _is_ possible because with enough images, you can capture the appropriate amount of information.
But not with just one 2D image.
Paul
But not with just one 2D image.
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
Right but i wasn't talking about engine exhaust or initials scribed on the back of a chair.....for a picture of a Star Trek ship....2d....it's not inconceivable that a future computer/printer could take a few 2d images from pictures of an old 1988 amt enterprise d kit and 3d print pieces of said model. Especially if I have images of the plastic pieces of the kit.
So in the year 2030 when I'm 47 and I have a 3d printer I can send the image/images to printer and print out the pieces sized to the scale I want
So in the year 2030 when I'm 47 and I have a 3d printer I can send the image/images to printer and print out the pieces sized to the scale I want
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First of all, you said:josdiaz wrote:Right but i wasn't talking about engine exhaust or initials scribed on the back of a chair.....for a picture of a Star Trek ship....2d....it's not inconceivable that a future computer/printer could take a few 2d images from pictures of an old 1988 amt enterprise d kit and 3d print pieces of said model. Especially if I have images of the plastic pieces of the kit.
So in the year 2030 when I'm 47 and I have a 3d printer I can send the image/images to printer and print out the pieces sized to the scale I want
If you had specified multiple images then I would have told you that if you were willing to rig them correctly and take enough photos, you could do it today. There is image interpretation and measurement software available today that can create a 3D model from enough 2D images. It is limited in what it can do, but it's there. Of course, if we are talking the future and you are permitting the person to make preparations to ensure getting accurate parts to make a kit, then images would not be the way to go. You'd have a small portable 3D scanner that would create the 3D file directly; a technology that is also available today.Someday we will be able to throw an image into the printer
Of course you have to realise that to capture the proper data from something that seems as simple as an AMT Enterprise, is actually a very complex. You don't just want the parts to be approximately the right size, they need to be exactly the right size so that they fit together and precision and accuracy are expensive.
Still, as long as the information can be gathered using either 3D scans or sufficient 2D images then you can do it all today, so you will definitely be able to do it better & cheaper "in the land of tomorrow!"
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
- TazMan2000
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I have followed this technology for years. I'm excited at the recent news and advancements in technology. There are several different ways of printing now, and much like the old battles of VHS versus Beta, and more recently HDDVD versus Blue-Ray, eventually the 3D technology for home printers will congeal into one type of technology and it will become the standard.
Will this become a passing fancy? Perhaps. How many people would find this technology useful in the home, other than hobbyists? Perhaps children can make their own toys, but do you think that they will?
TazMan2000
Will this become a passing fancy? Perhaps. How many people would find this technology useful in the home, other than hobbyists? Perhaps children can make their own toys, but do you think that they will?
TazMan2000
Good luck in 2030 of getting those copyrighted 2D images past your printer's built-in DRM.josdiaz wrote:....it's not inconceivable that a future computer/printer could take a few 2d images from pictures of an old 1988 amt enterprise d kit and 3d print pieces of said model. Especially if I have images of the plastic pieces of the kit.
World's Tallest Jawa!
3D printers as a modeling tool
I have a Makerbot Replicator 2 3D printer. They can be quite handy if you scratch build or model something that is not already commercially available.
I chose the MakerBot Replicator 2 because at the time it had a bigger build platform. It was fairly expensive $2199.99 or there about. The technology is still developing for the hobbyists and just about every few weeks there is a new one out on the market. Most use ABS or PLA plastic filament. I use PLA as it does not warp or peel as bad as ABS, ABS requires a heated build platform where PLA does not however from trial and error I found that regular model glue does not "bond" PLA very well but walthers GOO works great and just a little goes a long way. My main hobby is trains but also like to collect sci-fi kits I have a bunch waiting to get a turn on the build bench.
Trains lead me into casting and molding and then to 3D printing. I printed off a B5 star fury just recently.
http://bigbluetrains.com/forum/download ... p?id=20812
As a production tool desktop 3D printers currently just do not cut the mustard but as a prototyping tool they are fairly good.
I chose the MakerBot Replicator 2 because at the time it had a bigger build platform. It was fairly expensive $2199.99 or there about. The technology is still developing for the hobbyists and just about every few weeks there is a new one out on the market. Most use ABS or PLA plastic filament. I use PLA as it does not warp or peel as bad as ABS, ABS requires a heated build platform where PLA does not however from trial and error I found that regular model glue does not "bond" PLA very well but walthers GOO works great and just a little goes a long way. My main hobby is trains but also like to collect sci-fi kits I have a bunch waiting to get a turn on the build bench.
Trains lead me into casting and molding and then to 3D printing. I printed off a B5 star fury just recently.
http://bigbluetrains.com/forum/download ... p?id=20812
As a production tool desktop 3D printers currently just do not cut the mustard but as a prototyping tool they are fairly good.
A better link to B5 pic of a Star fury model
well that did not work.
May have to start using photo bucket.
May have to start using photo bucket.
- Stu Pidasso
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Doesn't the XBox Kinect have something like a 2D scanner that it turns into a 3D picture?
EDIT: Found one...
EDIT: Found one...
So me, trying to be tolerant of everybody's situations, went to a feminist picnic. Things fell apart fairly quickly after nobody made any sandwiches.
PLA http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polylactic_acid which is why regular hobby glues dinna work.
There is, just as a note, software that can take multiple images of an object and extrapolate it into 3D. More angles, better the extrapolation. Typically if it's just a single image, and the lens is unknown, the extrapolation has to be done by hand. The computer will but it'll much, much more information from a person willing to make a value judgement.
There is, just as a note, software that can take multiple images of an object and extrapolate it into 3D. More angles, better the extrapolation. Typically if it's just a single image, and the lens is unknown, the extrapolation has to be done by hand. The computer will but it'll much, much more information from a person willing to make a value judgement.
Abolish Alliteration
- Glorfindel
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So much for a 2D image not having the info for 3D. Clearly didn't have to wait 20 -30 years for that tech. 3 more yeas and they'll perfect that stuff. What is it Dr. Malcom said, oh' yeah, "Life will find a way."
Buck Laughlin: [after Beatrice the dog jumps up on the show judge] He went for her like she's made outta ham.
~Best in Show, 2000
~Best in Show, 2000
- Johnnycrash
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2D images DON'T have 3D info. That are SIMPLE objects that we know their shape (in general). The images didn't supply the info, the USER did. So...Glorfindel wrote:So much for a 2D image not having the info for 3D.
I can give you 100 "simple" looking 2D images that you will NEVER EVER get right in 3D. Candlesticks and coffee tables. Oooh! That's real impressive.
John Fleming
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
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Exactly! The user is making the initial call that the shape is round or square or whatever. Once you establish the fundamental shape and declare the axis, the software is still handy and neat to do the rest, but it definitely does _not_ have the inherant information in the 2D image. The human mind's intelligence is the key factor in getting from 2D to 3D, but then again, your mind already does that looking at every 2D image, doesn't it?Johnnycrash wrote:2D images DON'T have 3D info. That are SIMPLE objects that we know their shape (in general). The images didn't supply the info, the USER did. So...Glorfindel wrote:So much for a 2D image not having the info for 3D.
And, as we all know, sometimes the 2D image will fool even the human looking at it. The software will not help you then.
I'm not saying it's not impressive, because it is, but the software is not pulling 3D info out of 2D, you are.
Paul
The future is in your hands. Build it!
Once have 3D cameras that can take a holographic image you might be able to have the printer make a part from that.
BUILDING THE FUTURE!
"In the universe, space travel may be the normal birth pangs of an otherwise dying race. A test. Some races pass, some fail."
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Our only chance of long-term survival is not to remain lurking on planet Earth, but to spread out into space.
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The Blaposphere
"In the universe, space travel may be the normal birth pangs of an otherwise dying race. A test. Some races pass, some fail."
- Robert A. Heinlein
Our only chance of long-term survival is not to remain lurking on planet Earth, but to spread out into space.
- Stephen Hawking, 2011
The Blaposphere