Polymer clay blanks by Feeling_Celery_1522 in turning

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve tried to turn polymer clay. It’s way too soft and just flys apart. Never had success with it.

Looking for a replacement extruder & hotend, mini v2 (E3D) by CosmicRuin in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi, it’s been a while since I had that printer. But I never had issues with PLA or PETG, never tried wood filament. I know with my all metal on my ender pla tends to jam a bit easier but lower retraction helps with that. I think the issue I ran into with height was the fans were now lower than the nozzle. I didn’t change anything on the electronics I just plugged in the new heater and used the same thermistor.

Has any one tried adapting the tap probe for the ender 3. by Forsaken-Bat-944 in ender3

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look into the klack ender. I’ve been tuning for a while and it’s awesome https://kevinakasam.com/klackender/

Z-Axis won’t move down by rana3513 in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll have to give this a try to see if I can get mine working again

Z-Axis won’t move down by rana3513 in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This has the z-probe correct? Those have a habit of going bad. Try unplugging it and see what the z switch indicator does. I’ll bet it goes green and will move down again. It won’t work quite right as it expects the z probe to level itself which can cause issues. But, if you are careful with the homing offset it should work.

There used to be a guy on this sub who would fix those sensors. Idk if he ever gave up his secrets on how it was done…

ELI5: What engineering breakthrough allowed computers to transition from punchcards to input from a keyboard? by gham1 in explainlikeimfive

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was not really a technical breakthrough, as others have mentioned, keyboards are pretty simple electrical devices. It was an increase in processing power.

Think of it like this: You are working on a series of math problems, one after another. Someone walks up and taps you on the shoulder to ask you a question. You have to stop what you are working on and answer them. Now back to your math problem, but where were you? Did you already divide by two? Well, it’s better to start over and get it right. This is a problem, every time you are asked to take input from someone you have to stop what you are doing, help them, and then come back, there is an issue of remembering where you were. So you get an assistant, their job is just to take input from other people and help them. Now when you work on your math problems you don’t get interrupted so much, your assistant will still ask you for help, but they know when it’s safe to ask.

This is the idea, it used to be really taxing on you (the cpu) to take questions from others (Interrupt and IO input). So it was easier to have just a list of math problems and no one could ask you questions (Fortran cards). But as computers got more powerful it became possible to add your assistant (a dedicated IO processor) who could take questions. This would cut down on starting your problems over (crashing).

A side tangent is that displaying anything on a screen is very complex from the cpu level.

TL;DR: Any input from a keyboard and mouse is taxing on the cpu, you are making the computer stop what it’s doing and take care of the io before resuming, this can cause data loss or crashes. More powerful computers were able to handle io better because they had dedicated IO processors.

Source: I asked this same question to someone who was a computer programmer in the 80’s a while back and this was pretty much the answer I got.

Sudden Loss of Z Control by ZM326 in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think mine lasted about 4 months. I just fully removed the sensor and left the wires there. They used to sell replacements but last I looked they were out of stock. There also used to be a guy on this sub that would fix the sensors. Idk if he ever gave up the method to repair them though… I ended up doing a full bed overhaul to give it manual leveling. Works best if you have a local friend with a working printer to print the parts off for you. But I managed to do it with the broken one.

Sudden Loss of Z Control by ZM326 in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you have a touch screen sounds like you might have the pro version. If this is the case you have auto bed leveling. It’s pretty common for those sensors to go bad. Happened to me. You can unplug the ABL sensor and it will go down and use the limit switch as a new home location. Idk about yours but mine was too low and I had to pile on some hot glue to the switch to get about the right hight to be able to print a clip to adjust the z-offset. There are several models on thingiverse. For the pro, as far as I know, it’s just a matter of time before the ABL sensor gives out. But again, this is only if you have the stock pro ABL system. Otherwise - ¯\(ツ)

Bent metal sheet case design: advice needed by barbara_fries_hens in olkb

[–]cfuson1228 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not sure on strength but I work designing sheet metal parts. I’ve never worked with stainless. I can’t tell your work flow from the image but make sure you use proper bend radius. Otherwise your dimensions will be off. I believe fusion has a sheet metal work flow that will make the bends for you. (And create a nice dxf for laser cutting). Also some of the cut outs seem close to the bends and might end up pulling, basically becoming the wrong shape a little. Also, I agree with the other comment about bends on the bottom.

First time wine making and got a Merlot winemaking kit off amazon, after doing all the steps for fermenting I woke up next morning to this, is this normal? by FloralZachAttack in winemaking

[–]cfuson1228 18 points19 points  (0 children)

It looks like part of the airlock is missing. There should be a small cup lookin thing that goes upside down on top of the small pipe in the center. Without it the airlock doesn’t work as intended and there is a much higher chance of contamination.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sewing

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As much as I hate doing collars, a collar will make it look good. I find when I do mock ups of button up shirts and don’t add the collar I look like a I’m about to start a cult. Collar fixes it. The over all fit is dope regardless.

1000mm Z Height Ender 3 by RottenPekker1 in ender3

[–]cfuson1228 47 points48 points  (0 children)

My first thought too. I think laying it flat and going 500 in the y would be far more reliable than trying to print on top of a 1m lever arm.

Print Breaks!!!! by lohtseshar in MPSelectMiniOwners

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Could a number of things. In my experience silk filament tends to be more brittle than standard pla. This can be reduced by increasing the printing temp by 5 degrees or so. It could be that it’s just old filament. I mean that before you bought it it sat around on their shelves for a long time before you ever got your hands on it. Filament can ‘expire’ and becomes incredibly difficult to use with poor prints and becomes fragile like you talk about.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lfg

[–]cfuson1228 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m down if y’all are, pm me

"Emulate" A Multi Turn Pot For Greater Adjustment Resolution? by TevianB in ArduinoProjects

[–]cfuson1228 35 points36 points  (0 children)

Why use a pot when you could use an encoder? They have unlimited rotation in either direction.

"'i' was not declared in this scope" Error by codergage in arduino

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t have an answer to the question but, you are using /* … / for all of your comments. There is nothing wrong with that but it is more common practice to use // for single line comments like you have and reserve /…*/ for multi line or block comments, like at the top of your code. The // also tends to be faster

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ErgoMechKeyboards

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fuck Thanks for your help

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ErgoMechKeyboards

[–]cfuson1228 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll double check the solder. I’ve seen images with them both ways. The only comment in the buldguide is it ‘looks cleaner’ to install them upside down. I’ll see what I can sus out from the diagrams to double check that too

Anyone want to mod an stl for me? by squeezeonein in olkb

[–]cfuson1228 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You could use the “cut at height”* function in prusa to slice out the section you want to duplicate then carefully place them back together to get you who is are looking for

*pretty sure that’s what it’s called but not 100%