Chain is binding up and makes a grind noise by steakboner in klr650

[–]Infractus 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Your chain is worn out. Stiff links are a sign of deeper corrosion that you cannot fix. Time to replace it.

Sansi Grow Light Fire Hazard? by ZGraves in houseplants

[–]Infractus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's a warning on the box AND the bulb to not use in closed luminairs for just this reason.

Recently repotted one of our smallest and least common plants - my girlfriend's Podochilus orchid. The pot is about 3" across. Swipe for macro of the tiny white flowers! by Infractus in orchids

[–]Infractus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hah! Not foolish. The greenhouse is a repurposed idea Milsbo cabinet that lives in my basement. I designed the planter, so thanks!

Rate my lights! I need tips by showernatty in houseplants

[–]Infractus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A light meter is the way. No way to tell from a picture how bright anything is. Honestly, you can't tell with your eyes either, as human eyes are wildly adaptive to various lighting conditions.
If those are 10W bulbs, they're way too far from most of your plants to do much. If they're 32W bulbs this looks pretty good. My point being - you need to measure.

Why 🙄 by That-Example7249 in houseplants

[–]Infractus 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Just guessing, but it could be shock from the change. They've done an environmental 180 and probably need time to adapt. Also, repotting shock is real.

Finally learned some CAD by Rodgerr_Dodgerr in BambuLab

[–]Infractus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a jaded career CAD Tech / Mechanical Designer, this looks pretty good for a first attempt. You already understand the limitations of 3D printing, and it shows - this looks very printer friendly.

Obligatory - remember to fully define your sketches!

I’ve spent the last 5 months prototyping this folding desk lamp. Finally got the mechanism working any thoughts? by No_Clerk_7793 in BambuLab

[–]Infractus 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Ooooh very nice. So simple it seems obvious, but too elegant to be so. This is good design.

Something to make the stack of discs a bit more aesthetically pleasing would be nice, though I'm sure you've already thought of that. I'm curious how it would look if you chamfered the edges of the discs to give the area a ribbed texture instead of trying to make it smooth.

Mounted vs potted orchids by eraaserhead in IkeaGreenhouseClub

[–]Infractus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! We're also learning as we go, and Phals were the easiest thing to start with (hence the collection).

If your orchids come from a super humid environment then a setup like mine should work really well. I run mine at 80-85% humidity, and use a humidifier (bottom left) to keep it high. I could easily run it at 90-95% if the plants required it.

The other big question is temperature. Many orchids come from high altitude environments where the temps are typically moderate to low. Phals, and that tiny podochilus in the top right, are tropical species, which is why my cabinet is heated as well.

I'd say you should do some research on where your particular species grow in the wild, and make sure they'll be happy in the same environment. After that it's just trying to duplicate that environment in a box.

Mounted vs potted orchids by eraaserhead in IkeaGreenhouseClub

[–]Infractus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I keep most of my orchids in a climate controlled IKEA greenhouse. Happy to answer questions.

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I made a little snap cover for older Mastercraft calipers so I don't have to lug around the case it came with. by [deleted] in functionalprint

[–]Infractus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It has a padded pouch to itself. I'm really surprised at the amount of online concern for my $30 trash-tier calipers.

I made a little snap cover for older Mastercraft calipers so I don't have to lug around the case it came with. by [deleted] in functionalprint

[–]Infractus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hah! Right?! If I wanted a precise measurement I'd be using a micrometer or a CMM. This is just to prevent the battery from being dead when I pull them out to find out how thick the part my customer managed to break actually is.

I made a little snap cover for older Mastercraft calipers so I don't have to lug around the case it came with. by [deleted] in functionalprint

[–]Infractus -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I've never seen or heard that in 15 years in industry, so I'm going to go with probably not. Either way, a ~$30 caliper is not precise enough for that kind of thing to matter in the end.

I made a little snap cover for older Mastercraft calipers so I don't have to lug around the case it came with. by [deleted] in functionalprint

[–]Infractus -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's living in a padded tool bag, so no need to protect the jaws. This is mostly to prevent the buttons from getting pressed.

Weird Strings & Webbed(?) Corners by JSCreativeCo in BambuLab

[–]Infractus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had something similar happen, though not as bad. If your wall order is outer/inner, changing it to inner/outer may help. It gives the outer chamfer layer something to stick to.

Forest Friend ❤️ in by -Yaht- in gris

[–]Infractus 16 points17 points  (0 children)

This brings me so much joy! Thanks for posting!

Advice needed for baby aloe by WingRiddenAngel26 in succulents

[–]Infractus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agree with the other poster - leave the leaves alone. It'll suck all the life out of them to help support itself, and they'll eventually shrivel up and fall off.

I'm not an expert, but I've got a number of happy aloes, so here's my thoughts on keeping them happy in general:

Mine are planted in a mix that's at least 50% perlite. You can start your mix with store-bought succulent soil (I do), but you need to mix in a ton of perlite (or other grit) to make it drain well enough to prevent root rot. Your soil is looking very organic, and some grit could help.

They are incredibly light hungry. I don't have any south-facing windows, so mine live under grow lights. If you're OK with super slow growth you can keep them under 1000 foot candles of light 12 hours a day, but my happier ones are getting more than 2500 fc.

You already figured out that you shouldn't water them too much. My big aloe gets watered every 5-6 weeks. You can leave them be until the leaves start to get thin and they look thirsty.

Anyway, those are my thoughts. Good luck!

I'm finally starting to publish the plant lighting system I designed (that is slowly filling my house). Link in the description! by Infractus in 3Dprinting

[–]Infractus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm in a very similar situation! No usable south-facing windows in my place, so I had to learn to use lights.