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Feb 6, 2019 at 8:58 comment added 0scar When children are involved, wouldn't it be better to try to make it unbreakable? For the sake of their well being. :) If you have a 1.75 mm filament machine, set the slicer at 2.85 mm, you get a sparsely filled print. Happens once in a while when you upgrade the Ultimaker Cura version when if defaults back to 2.85 mm.
Feb 6, 2019 at 2:37 history edited Greenonline CC BY-SA 4.0
Added no legal advice wanted
Feb 1, 2019 at 6:21 answer added Cem Kalyoncu timeline score: 0
Jan 30, 2019 at 16:54 answer added Anthony Herrera timeline score: 2
Jan 30, 2019 at 15:27 history edited Carl Witthoft CC BY-SA 4.0
removed the Lego references to calm the "trademark oh no!" responses
Jan 30, 2019 at 15:26 comment added Carl Witthoft is there a good reason to print new parts with built-in (but unquantifiable or unrepeatable) fragility as opposed to buying stock parts and cutting controllable failure/fracture lines? Let's get to RootCauseAnalysis: why do you want things to fail, and do you want the failures to be repeatable?
Jan 30, 2019 at 7:31 comment added user3352632 I think I need to make something clear here. I do not intend to make copies of legally protected materials. My reason is not that I want to make these cheaper than the manufacturer sells them. I want to make them myself so that they have breakages (and they don't have to be precisely the Lego gears, just like that). I am interested in ideas and proposals on how to do this.
Jan 29, 2019 at 17:47 answer added Trish timeline score: 2
Jan 29, 2019 at 17:32 comment added Perplexed Dipole Turn your extrusion multiplier down so you are deliberately under extruding.
Jan 29, 2019 at 17:00 review First posts
Jan 29, 2019 at 17:51
Jan 29, 2019 at 16:57 history asked user3352632 CC BY-SA 4.0