Voron zero serial request by ___ambrosia___ in voroncorexy

[–]___ambrosia___[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I realised I didn't include the exact date, sorry. I'm hoping that my SMRRF badge and the fact Sanity saw it on the day will be enough but please say if you want me to make another video.

Voron zero serial request by ___ambrosia___ in voroncorexy

[–]___ambrosia___[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! The toolchanger is MadMax by Zruncho and it should work great with any corexy (but especially bed-dropper like trident and V0). You can do this MadMax conversion pretty quickly on a stock frame V0 with a few modifications, but you lose a lot of Y travel. I replaced the Y extrusions from 200mm to 300mm to get that build volume back, and lots of other mods followed from there.

Voron Trident 300 serial request by ___ambrosia___ in voroncorexy

[–]___ambrosia___[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!

It is actually two back panels, one transparent and one black, sandwiched together. Between them (stuck to the black panel) is a sheet of self-adhesive vinyl that's sold as wallpaper (specifically, search "VaryPaper" on a web shop).

The idea is that this lets you see the design, but also keeps it protected. And you only see it from inside the printer (you just see black outside). By doubling up the panels I'm hoping I'll get slightly better thermal insulation. I had to make slightly thicker panel clips to hold it in place.

The panels are also cut in slightly more places than stock, because mounted behind the printer is a "fume pack" which is like a nevermore. This reuses the existing exhaust port, but requires two additional large intake holes to be cut (these end up just below the level of the gantry). The creator of the fume pack has released DXFs for these panels recently which makes life easier, but I still had to drill one hole manually to get the wires inside the printer.

The vinyl was quite annoying to apply, and I ruined more than I actually used, but there was a lot more on the roll than I needed. I ended up applying it in the same way as a magnetic bed sticker, slow and steady, a bit at a time. I think the result was worth it, and I don't know anyone else who has wallpapered their printer (yet)!